% replaces any number of letters (la% - lake, lamp)_ replaces one letter (ca_ - car, cat)
Looking for help with the New Your Times crosswords? At CWSolver.co.uk, you will find quick and accurate answers! Simply enter the clue and the number of letters, and we will help you find the right solution instantly. Discover an easy way to solve even the most challenging crosswords!

The Crossword Solver found 114 answers for The New York Times crossword clue german “a”. The answers have between 3 and 17 letters.

AnswerClue
SEñORA :: GERMANspanish
GERMANErelevant
HERRgerman Mr.
BOCKgerman beer historically consumed by monks
BEEMERhigh-end German car, casually
MEINEgerman possessive
OLAFangela’s successor as German chancellor
CINCOfünf : German :: ___ : Spanish
NIEgerman for “never”
WURSTgerman sausage
NEINgerman word that sounds like a number in English
SENORherr : German :: ___ : Spanish
KLAUSACTCASUALKslangy request to a German to play it cool?
RHINEriver alongside many German vineyards
KOHLhelmut ___, 1980s-’90s German chancellor
OLAFscholz of German politics
ACHgerman exclamation
LILAname that means “night” in Arabic and “purple” in German
AUDIgerman automaker
OSTgerman direction
UBOATgerman sub in W.W. II fighting
ICHgerman pronoun
NEUTERlike the German article “das”
EINEa, in German
BMWSsome German rides
ICHi, in German
PEZcandy whose name derives from the German “Pfefferminz”
ACHgerman “Geez!”
HIMmeaning of the Italian “lui” or German “ihn”
OLAFgerman chancellor Scholz
DIEgerman article
BLAUlike the Danube, to Germans
BEERBRATale-simmered German sausage, informally
RIESENgerman candy with a caramel center
EINgerman “a”
LEICAgerman camera brand
OMAgerman 53-Across
OPELgerman auto since 1899
BAUgerman lead-in to haus
NEINgerman refusal
FRAUgerman title
SIEgerman “you”
ODERgerman “or”
OTTOgerman swimmer Kristin, who won six gold medals at the Seoul Olympics
OMAgerman granny
PETRIeponymous German bacteriologist
BRATgerman sausage, informally
WURSTgerman food that’s better than it sounds?
DORFgerman “village”
FALSEFRIENDmisleading cognate, like the German “Gift” which actually means “poison”

Recent searches in the crossword dictionary: