Crossword clues for melon
melon
- Cantaloupe, for example
- Cantaloupe or honeydew, for example
- Cantaloupe, for one
- Water or musk
- Pinkish Crayola color
- Pinkish color
- Gourd family fruit
- Casaba or honeydew
- Winter __
- Midori liqueur flavor
- Juicy gourd
- Healthy breakfast choice
- Fruit-salad staple
- Fruit-cup fruit
- Fruit tray goody
- Fruit cup fruit
- Crenshaw or casaba, e.g
- Crenshaw or cantaloupe
- Brunch slice
- Breakfast slice
- Breakfast buffet choice
- You might thump it to see if it's fresh
- Vine-grown fruit
- Sweet gourd
- Stockholders' bonanza
- Shannon Hoon band Blind ___
- Relative of the squash
- Relative of the pumpkin
- Profit surplus
- Picnic finisher
- One might be thumped at the market
- Non-filling dessert
- Medium crimson or dark pink
- Large sweet fruit
- Large profit to be divided up
- It might receive a thumping
- It may be prepared with a baller
- Honeydew, for example
- Gourd family product
- Galia or gac
- Fruit-cup tidbit
- Fruit that's still a fruit when two of its letters are switched
- Fruit that may get thumped
- Fruit sometimes cut into balls
- Fruit served with prosciutto
- Fruit seen in balls
- Fruit in balls
- Fruit in a sweetheart cake
- Fruit grown on a vine
- Fruit grown in a patch
- Fruit cut into balls
- Fruit cup morsel
- Fruit — lemon (anag)
- Dividend fruit
- Dark pink
- Crenshaw or casaba
- Crayola color similar to Mauvelous
- Casaba ____
- Breakfast side, sometimes
- Botanically, it's a berry
- Big fruit
- Baller's target?
- Balled fruit
- All-too-prevalent fruit in a salad, imo
- "No Rain" Blind ___
- ___ Ball (cocktail that tastes like honeydew)
- Breakfast fruit
- Item in a patch
- Juicy fruit
- Honeydew, e.g.
- Shade of crimson
- Breakfast offering
- Casaba, e.g.
- Dessert item
- Deep pink shade
- Cantaloupe, e.g.
- It might get a thumping
- Breakfast or dessert dish
- It's opened with a knife
- Fruit served in balls
- Fruit whose seeds are spit out
- Fruit often cut into balls
- Fruit salad ingredient
- Low-fat breakfast dish
- Cantaloupe or honeydew, e.g
- ___ baller (tool for scooping out a cantaloupe)
- Breakfast order
- Head, in slang
- Any of numerous fruits of the gourd family having a hard rind and sweet juicy flesh
- Casaba, e.g
- Stockholder's bonanza
- Pepo
- Yellowish pink
- Dieter's breakfast, perhaps
- Casaba, for one
- Cantaloupe, e.g
- Extra dividend
- Profit windfall
- Gourd fruit
- Word after musk or water
- Citron ___
- Chaps downing limoncello on vacation - it's quite sweet
- Eg cantaloupe
- Sweet juicy fruit
- See chaps without fruit
- Number upset after dinner maybe without a fruit
- Fruit pieces: see inside
- Fruit needing flood regularly eaten by half of us?
- Fruit - lemon
- Large fruit
- Juicy edible gourd
- Fleshy fruit
- Breakfast staple
- Shade of pink
- Pink shade
- Honeydew, e.g
- Breakfast serving
- Honeydew, for one
- Pink hue
- Honeydew or cantaloupe, for example
- Smoothie ingredient
- Type of fruit
- Summer fruit
- Produce item
- Crenshaw, for one
- Succulent fruit
- Persian, for one
- Casaba or Crenshaw
- Brunch fruit
- Financial windfall
- Crenshaw, e.g
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Wiktionary
WordNet
Wikipedia
Usage examples of "melon".
Wagyu back home, sat in a booth around an immense stainless-steel griddle, and ordered a raw beef appetizer, a beef main course, beer, sake, and melon ice cream.
Their blackened bellies had bloated like ripe melons, and small creatures could be seen squirming under their stretched skins.
Mek Gamal called a halt, then, and we ate melons, their fruit faintly astringent, but blessedly moist.
Bienville, the brother, also deserves remembrance both in France and America--dismissed once but exonerated, returning later to succeed the pessimistic Cadillac and to lay the foundations of New Orleans on the only dry spot he had found on his first journey up the river, there to plant the seed of the fruits and melons and pumpkins of the garden on Dauphin Island, that were to bring forth millionfold, though they have not yet entirely crowded out the cypress and the palmetto, and the fleur-de-lis that still grows wild and flowers brilliantly at certain seasons.
There were garnet-red cherries, peridot grapes, apples like great rubies streaked with gold and amber, amethyst blueberries, strawberries glowing like pink charcoal, yellow pears of topaz, lucid gooseberries of translucent green quartz, quinces still on their twigs, melons, pomegranates, polished damsons, figs like blushing drops of jade.
Myfwany said, popping a roll of melon and prosciutto into her mouth and dusting her hands together.
Khefti thriftily had his cook pickle the rinds from his melons, in keeping with his parsimonious nature.
For two hours did that wretched man prosecute his unhallowed calling, unrecompensed, and going round and round the court, apparently under the impression that it was some other place, while Melons surveyed him from an adjoining fence with calm satisfaction.
The fruits are citrus, dates, melons, apricots, figs, almonds, and cactus fruit.
The duarough produced tiny melons the size of fists, plump rosy appleberries, yellow rumroot wrapped in husks, shelled halver nuts and the great white mushrooms of which he was so fond, along with a sprig of withered, aromatic leaves.
He now shipped carloads of melons to Denver, raised sweet corn and was making a big success of his sugar beets, which for the time being he fed to cattle, since there was no sugar factory in the region.
Quinn rose in his chair as far as the restraints would allow and saw that Scooter did indeed have a blowhole just behind his melon.
From orbit, the land looks like the surface of a cantaloupe melon, and that gave it its name.
You will marry the queen and have a son with a nose like a casaba melon.
Private shows with big dogs and tiny gentlemen and women with breasts as big as casaba melons.