1 |
Fore |
Till |
Up to |
Prior |
Until |
Afore |
Before |
Up 'til |
Hitherto |
Up until |
Preceding |
Aforetime |
Previously |
Heretofore |
Prior (to) |
Long start |
Afore" kin |
Anteceding |
Long intro |
Rather than |
Sooner than |
Before, old |
Cockney cry |
Old "before |
Prior, once |
Bard's word |
Poetic ever |
Previous to |
Poetic word |
Bard's "soon |
Earlier than |
Long opening |
Poetic prior |
Poets'before |
Prior, prior |
To be abroad |
Before, once |
Not following |
Poetic adverb |
Before, poet. |
Long lead-in? |
Long preceder |
Bardic before |
Prior, to Poe |
In advance of |
Air" homophone |
Before" of old |
Ahead of, once |
Before, poshly |
Before,of yore |
Lead-in to now |
Lyrical before |
Odist's before |
Poet’s word. |
Prior to Prior |
Up to, in odes |
Way-old before |
Yore's "before |
Afore's cousin |
Keats' "before |
Long beginning |
Burns' "before |
Prior's "prior |
Frost's before |
Before, to Poe |
Quaint "before |
Before, before |
Before, of yore |
Palindrome word |
___ long (soon) |
Heir" homophone |
Archaic "before |
Bard's 'before' |
Before in here? |
Before, way-old |
Burns's "before |
Formerly before |
Homonym for air |
Old conjunction |
Poetic 'before' |
Prior, in poems |
Word before now |
Keats's "before |
Poet's 'before' |
Prior, in poesy |
Shortly before? |
Before, earlier |
Beret's center? |
Lead-in to long |
Ode preposition |
Before, in odes |
Old preposition |
Prior, to poets |
To be, to Bizet |
Earlier, earlier |
Before, to Byron |
Look __ you leap |
Ancestor of "pre |
Before in poesy |
Before in "there |
Before to Yeats |
Before, quaintly |
Before, way back |
Before. (poetic) |
Byron's 'before' |
Byronic 'before' |
Earlier, in 1550 |
Hamlet's "before |
Lead-in for long |
Pre-, poetically |
Prior to, to Poe |
Prior, in poetry |
Prior, old-style |
Sooner, to bards |
Before, to Frost |
Before, to Prior |
Byronian "before |
Shelley's before |
Before to Burns |
Before to poets |
Before, to Blake |
Before, to Donne |
Sooner, in poems |
Sonneteer's word |
Before, formerly |
Poet's "prior to |
Sooner, in verse |
Ever, poetically |
Obsolete "before |
Bard's "prior to |
Before, in rhyme |
Before, long ago |
Palindromic word |
Before, to Keats |
Before, to bards |
Before, in poems |
Before, in verse |
Earlier, in poems |
Before, old-style |
Before, to a bard |
Bard's palindrome |
Before to Emerson |
Before, to Birney |
Byron preposition |
Cockney's present |
Homophone for Ayr |
Opposite of after |
Prior to, in odes |
Prior's "prior to |
Sooner, in poetry |
Sovereign center? |
Up to, for a poet |
Before, in an ode |
Before, to Bryant |
Haiku preposition |
Old-style "before |
Palindrome middle |
Poetic 'prior to' |
Sooner, to a bard |
Sooner, to a poet |
Word before while |
Before, in a poem |
Before, in verses |
Before, to Hamlet |
Before, for poets |
Reference center? |
Palindrome center |
Poet's palindrome |
Before, to a poet |
Poetic palindrome |
Before, in poetry |
Poetic contraction |
Poetic conjunction |
Poet's preposition |
Poetic preposition |
Prior to, in poems |
Prior to, in verse |
Prior to, to Prior |
Able was I ___ ... |
Before, poetically |
Present!," in Soho |
Ahead of, in poems |
Bardic preposition |
Before, in hymnody |
Before, previously |
Before, to Chaucer |
Before, to Marlowe |
Dickinson's sooner |
Earlier, in a poem |
Heir's sound-alike |
Homophone for Aire |
Homophone for Eire |
Homophone of "heir |
Keats' preposition |
Long start, of old |
Long starter, once |
Outer ears center? |
Poet's "previously |
Poet's previous to |
Preceding, in odes |
Prior to, in poesy |
Prior to, long ago |
Prior, to Browning |
Sooner, poetically |
Before, old school |
Before, to and fro |
Blake's ''before'' |
Popular palindrome |
Prior to, to poets |
Reversible "before |
Before, before now |
Before, to Kipling |
Prior to, to bards |
Ahead of, in verse |
Long introduction? |
Prior to, in rhyme |
Before, for a bard |
Before, either way |
Before, to Spenser |
Before of the past |
Before, bard-style |
Quaint preposition |
Before, in ballads |
Before, in sonnets |
Sonnet preposition |
Before, to Shelley |
Bard's preposition |
Prior to, in poetry |
Ahead of, in poetry |
Ahead of, to a bard |
Archaic conjunction |
Before to Browning |
Before, to Beaumont |
Before, to Suckling |
Before, verse style |
Kipling preposition |
Long lead-in of old |
Old-style "prior to |
Out front, long ago |
Poetic "previous to |
Poetric contraction |
Preceding, in verse |
Preposition in odes |
Previously, way old |
Prior to, in an ode |
Up until, in poetry |
Ahead of, old-style |
Before, archaically |
Before, in the past |
Before, to Tennyson |
Cockney's location? |
Homophone for "heir |
Now or long lead-in |
Previous, to a bard |
Prior to, to a bard |
Prior, prior to now |
Formerly, to a poet |
Before, in a sonnet |
Before, to an odist |
Literary ''before'' |
Odist's preposition |
Before, in ballades |
Poet Prior's "prior |
Archaic preposition |
Lyrical preposition |
Prior to, to a poet |
Two-way preposition |
Before, to the bard |
Prior to, poetically |
Part of a palindrome |
''Look ___ ye leap'' |
Pre" relative of old |
A palindrome's pivot |
Anteceding, to poets |
Before in adherence? |
Before, to Boccaccio |
Center of reverence? |
Deco-rated designer? |
Earlier, to the Bard |
Intro to long or now |
It sounds like "heir |
Midway down Everest? |
Outmoded preposition |
Palindrome for Pryor |
Poetic word of order |
Predating, in poetry |
Previous to, in odes |
Previously, to Keats |
Prior to, in sonnets |
Prior to, previously |
Shakespeare's before |
Sooner than, in odes |
Stanzaic preposition |
Tennyson preposition |
Word used before now |
Able was I ___ I ... |
Before" in old poems |
Macbeth" preposition |
Before, romantically |
Before, to Dickinson |
Long or now preceder |
Palindromic 'before' |
Preceding, in poetry |
Ahead of, poetically |
Before, in a ballade |
Keatsian preposition |
Previously, in verse |
Palindrome in poetry |
Previously, in poems |
Palindrome for poets |
Obsolete preposition |
Literary preposition |
Poetic time reference |
Previously, in poetry |
Before, in old poetry |
Before in Cinderella? |
Before, before before |
Before, if you're 475 |
Before, pretentiously |
Before, to an elegist |
Before, to Wordsworth |
Browning's ''before'' |
Cockney location word |
Cockney's dog summons |
Homophone for ''air'' |
Not after, poetically |
Poetic previously |
Preposition in an ode |
Previous to, in poems |
Prior to, in a sonnet |
Shakespearean "before |
Sooner than, in poems |
Sooner than, to bards |
Sooner than, to Byron |
Sooner than, to Keats |
Up to, to a versifier |
Word of relative time |
Before, to Longfellow |
Dickinson preposition |
It comes before "long |
Previous to, in verse |
Previous to, to bards |
Word with long or now |
Before, in a syllable |
Preceding, poetically |
Sooner than, in verse |
Afore's poetic cousin |
Previous to, in poesy |
Preposition in poetry |
Earlier than, to poets |
Previously, poetically |
Previously, previously |
''... ___ I saw Elba'' |
Before" of long before |
Present," to a cockney |
Before to Shakespeare |
Before, for Wordsworth |
Before, non-iambically |
Center of differences? |
Center of a palindrome |
Center of preferences? |
Earlier than, in poems |
Heretofore, to Herrick |
It sounds like ''air'' |
Long or now antecedent |
Middle of a palindrome |
Palindromist's "before |
Preposition before now |
Present, Cockney-style |
Previous to, to a bard |
Previous to, to a poet |
Previously, to Chaucer |
Prior to, in old times |
Rather than, to Cowper |
Rather than, to Hamlet |
Sooner than in poetry |
Old poetic conjunction |
Poet's palindrome word |
Sonneteer's ''before'' |
Versifier's ''before'' |
Old long introduction? |
Reversible preposition |
Sooner than, to a bard |
Sooner than, to a poet |
Rather than, in poetry |
Before, back and forth |
Before, to a sonneteer |
Before, in palindromes |
Poet's word for before |
Before, for Shakespeare |
In advance of, in verse |
Poetic lead-in to "long |
Previously, in lit crit |
Previously, to Browning |
Prior to, of old poetry |
Rather than, poetically |
Roll-call reply in Soho |
Sonneteer's preposition |
Spanish letter after cu |
Word before long or now |
Before, in bygone times |
Before, in one syllable |
Before, long before now |
Before, to Robert Burns |
Obsolescent preposition |
Previous to, poetically |
Sooner than, in sonnets |
Sooner than, poetically |
Sooner than, to Spenser |
Before, a long time ago |
Before, to poets of old |
Now" or "long" preceder |
Before, palindromically |
Poetic word for "before |
Stanza writer's "before |
Versifier's preposition |
Palindromic conjunction |
Palindromic preposition |
Before, in poetry of old |
... was I ___ I saw Elba |
Cockney roll call answer |
Cockney's "in this place |
Hostile reaction center? |
It may come before "long |
Palindrome seen in poems |
Poetic word before "long |
___ long (poetic "soon") |
Famous palindrome center |
I - I palindromic center |
Poetic homophone of "air |
Prepositional palindrome |
Old word meaning "before |
''Before,'' in literature |
Able was I ___ I saw ... |
Before, in Brit Lit class |
In the time leading up to |
It might come before long |
Previous to, to Dickinson |
Previously used in poetry |
Previously used by poets? |
Riley's "_____ I Went Mad |
Romantic poetry's "before |
. . . ___ my Romeo comes? |
It can appear before long |
Preposition used by bards |
Earlier than, to Browning |
It may appear before long |
Shakespearean preposition |
Preposition in old poetry |
Old-fashioned preposition |
___ I was old!": Coleridge |
Listen ___!" (Cockney cry) |
Look ___ ye leap": Heywood |
Prior to," palindromically |
Cockney's roll-call answer |
Double-bladed ___ II razor |
In advance of, archaically |
Lead-in for "long" or "now |
Long introduction of yore? |
Palindrome in a palindrome |
Poor Richard's preposition |
Before, in poetic language |
Before, in romantic poetry |
Old-style "heir" homophone |
Vague time frame indicator |
You may see it before long |
Poet's palindromic "before |
Before, in an old syllable |
Two-way poetic preposition |
Palindromist's preposition |
Part of a famous palindrome |
. . . ___ I will leave her |
... ___ he drove out of ... |
At this point, to Andy Capp |
Leading up to, in Lit class |
Middle of an old palindrome |
Old-style homophone of "air |
Palindrome in many a stanza |
Sooner than, to a sonneteer |
Sooner than, to Shakespeare |
Spanish letter two after pe |
Syllable-saving preposition |
Old intro to "long" or "now |
This may appear before long |
Poetic word meaning "before |
Before, as written by poets |
Now" or "long" starter, once |
Before, backward and forward |
Before, in a syllable of old |
Center of a noted palindrome |
Napoleon's palindrome center |
Old start for "now" or "long |
What may be seen before long |
What you may see before long |
With "long," this means soon |
You might see it before long |
Before" in only one syllable |
Center of a famed palindrome |
Middle of a famed palindrome |
Old syllable meaning "before |
. . . was I ___ I saw . . . |
Bit of poetry from Cinderella |
Older than old-school "before |
''Able was I ___ I saw Elba'' |
Center of a famous palindrome |
Middle of a famous palindrome |
...___ he rode out of sight... |
Middle of a popular palindrome |
Palindromic poet's preposition |
Shelley's oft-used preposition |
Word following "Able was I ... |
Before, before we used "before |
Palindromic poetry preposition |
Well-known palindrome's middle |
Palindromic preposition of old |
Poet's palindromic preposition |
___ Babylon was dust" (Shelley) |
Maid of Athens, ___ we part ... |
Before, long before the present |
Center of the "Elba" palindrome |
It's between I's in a palidrome |
Palindromic, poetic preposition |
Previously, in literature class |
What's been written before now? |
An old syllable meaning "before |
Poetic, palindromic preposition |
Center of Napoleon's palindrome |
Previously used by Shakespeare? |
___ half my days . . . ": Milton |
___ the first cock crow" (Shak.) |
... ___ I again behold my Romeo! |
But I heard him exclaim, ___ ... |
Catch, __ she change . . ." Pope |
Earlier in time, a long time ago |
___ Time transfigured me": Yeats |
Word between I's in a palindrome |
Obsolete palindromic preposition |
Middle of a well-known palindrome |
... ___ the set of sun": "Macbeth |
Air homophone that's a palindrome |
Center word of a famed palindrome |
Middle of the Napoleon palindrome |
Preposition handy for palindromes |
Preposition used by Clement Moore |
Prior to, in "The Prioress's Tale |
You might have seen it before now |
Before, either way you look at it |
Center of a well-known palindrome |
Middle of a Napoleonic palindrome |
'... -- he drove out of sight ...' |
Go you to Juliet ___ you go to bed |
Middle of a palindrome re Napoleon |
Preposition with multiple homonyms |
... __ darkness comes on": Bartram |
___ the bat hath flown" ("Macbeth") |
Drink deep ___ you depart" (Hamlet) |
We shun it ___ it comes": Dickinson |
Night Before Christmas" preposition |
But I heard him exclaim, ___ he ... |
I - I connector of palindromic fame |
Ended, __ it begun" (Dickinson poem) |
I heard him exclaim ___ he drove ... |
Visit from St. Nicholas" preposition |
You always end ___ you begin": Shak. |
Outmoded preposition meaning "before |
Preposition in Napoleon's palindrome |
Preposition often seen in crosswords |
___ thou and peace may meet": Shelley |
___ thy fair light had fled": Shelley |
___ upon my bed I lay me": Longfellow |
Blood hath been shed __ now": Macbeth |
I feel thee __ I see thy face": Keats |
Lord, We Ask Thee ___ We Part" (hymn) |
Preposition that may come before long |
... __ those shoes were old": "Hamlet |
___ yet we loose the legions": Kipling |
Maid of Athens, __ we part ...": Byron |
Emily Dickinson's "Ended, ___ it begun |
It meant before, before we used before |
Word between I's in a noted palindrome |
___ Fancy has been quelled": Longfellow |
... heard him exclaim, ___ he drove ... |
Be careful __ ye enter in . . .": Keats |
Take heed, __ summer comes ... ": Shak. |
Before, to a pretentious poetry student |
Middle of the "Able... Elba" palindrome |
Syllable-saving word for a haiku writer |
Word that sounds like a Brontë heroine |
Into the brain __ one can think": Keats |
Word between I's in a famous palindrome |
It has three- and four-letter homophones |
''... tell them I'll be there ___ long'' |
. . . ___ he drove out of sight": Moore |
Borne hither, __ all eludes me": Whitman |
I kiss'd thee __ I kill'd thee": Othello |
First word of Swinburne's "March: An Ode |
Poetic preposition before "now" or "long |
Meet me ___ the first cock crow": Oberon |
___ the mother's milk had dried": Kipling |
... thou must leave ___ long" (Sonnet 73) |
... Venus sets __ Mercury can rise": Pope |
And Venus sets __ Mercury can rise": Pope |
I kissed thee ___ I killed thee": Othello |
That will be __ the set of sun": "Macbeth |
We shun it ___ it comes": Emily Dickinson |
Maid of Athens, ___ We Part" (Byron poem) |
Listen, ___ the sound be fled": Longfellow |
Ended, ___ it begun" (Emily Dickinson poem) |
I hope to see London once ___ I die": Shak. |
Inconstancy falls off ___ it begins": Shak. |
James Whitcomb Riley's ''_____ I Went Mad'' |
But I heard him exclaim, ___ he drove . . . |
''___ on my bed my limbs I lay'' (Coleridge) |
. . . ___ the mightiest Julius fell": Shak. |
__ pales in Heaven the morning star": Lowell |
Take heed, __ summer comes ...": Shakespeare |
___ we extinguish sight and speech": Browning |
... exclaim, __ he drove out of sight": Moore |
... die strangled ___ my Romeo comes?": Shak. |
...__ the parting hour go by": Matthew Arnold |
I kissed thee ___ I killed thee": Shakespeare |
Thanks in old age - thanks ___ I go": Whitman |
A little __ the mightiest Julius fell":"Hamlet |
And fly, __ evil intercept thy flight": Milton |
Dear mother Ida, hearken ___ I die" (Tennyson) |
Preposition that comes in handy in palindromes |
Previously, in a 19th century literature class |
Maid of Athens, ___ we part" (Lord Byron poem) |
___ I forsook the crowded solitude": Wordsworth |
___ I let fall the windows of mine eyes": Shak. |
___ the steamer bore him Eastward ...": Kipling |
A little __ the mightiest Julius fell": Horatio |
Able was I ___ I saw Elba" (notable palindrome) |
___ sin could blight or sorrow fade" (Coleridge) |
For Lycidas is dead, dead ___ his prime": Milton |
Myself was stirring ___ the break of day": Shak. |
To love that well which thou must leave ___ long |
Conjunction in the middle of a famous palindrome |
Wordsworth's "__ With Cold Beads of Midnight Dew |
... the sun paused ___ it should alight": Shelley |
When you're quartered safe out ___" ("Gunga Din") |
Emily Dickinson’s “We shun it ___ it comes” |
___ I am J.H." (secret code in the movie "Brazil") |
___ on thy chin the springing beard began" (Prior) |
... __ he drove out of sight": Christmas poem line |
On the night __ the pending battle . . .": Whitman |
Thanks in old age - thanks ___ I go": Walt Whitman |
'I heard him exclaim, -- he drove out of sight ...' |
__ fancy you consult, consult your purse": Franklin |
___ on my bed my limbs I lay" (line from Coleridge) |
Lightning tingles, hovering ___ it strike": Shelley |
Old age creeps on us ___ we think it nigh" (Dryden) |
. . . a little ___ the mightiest Julius fell": Shak. |
Like a stoop'd falcon ___ he takes his prey" (Keats) |
We'll teach you to drink deep ___ you depart": Shak. |
''And look before you ___ you leap'' (Samuel Butler) |
Whose passing-bell may ___ the midnight toll" (Keats) |
You shall hear more __ morning": "Measure for Measure |
We'll teach you to drink deep ___ you depart": Hamlet |
__ frost-flower and snow-blossom faded ...": Swinburne |
___ midnight's frown and morning's smile..." (Shelley) |
... __ the hot sun count / His dewy rosary ...": Keats |
It will be long ___ the marshes resume" (Robert Frost) |
But I heard him exclaim, ___ he drove out of sight ... |
Death closes all: but something ___ the end" (Tennyson) |
I hope to see London once ___ I die": "Henry IV, Part 2 |
Let us part, __ the season of passion forget us": Yeats |
___ yet that last strain dying awed the air" (Coleridge) |
Able was I ___ I saw Elba" (Napoleon-inspired palindrome) |
Nay, 'twill be this hour ___ I have done weeping" (Shak.) |
___ Sleep Comes Down to Soothe the Weary Eyes" (Dunbar poem) |
Prior to, poetically [Subscribe to the AVCX at avxwords.com] |
___ the bat hath flown / His cloister'd flight ...": Macbeth |
___ fancy you consult, consult your purse": Benjamin Franklin |
Blood hath been shed ___ now, i' th' olden time": Shakespeare |
Ev'n thought meets thought, ___ from the lips it part" (Pope) |
___ the long roll of the ages end" (start of an old Irish song) |
And look thou meet me ___ the first cock crow" (Oberon, to Puck) |
___ thrice the sun hath done salutation to the dawn" (Shakespeare) |
Poetic preposition most puzzlemakers are tired of writing clues for |
That 'tis their sighing, wailing ___ they go / Into oblivion": Keats |
“How long will a man lie i’ the earth ___ he rot?”: “Hamlet” |
___ Music's golden tongue / Flatter'd to tears this aged man ...": Keats |
That will be ___ the set of sun" (line from the first scene of "Macbeth") |
Leave this horrid scene ___ I use another outdated poetic preposition!" (Madison) |
___, little darlin', don't shed no tears" (lyric in Bob Marley's "No Woman, No Cry") |
But I heard him exclaim, ___ he drove out of sight" (penultimate line of "A Visit From St. Nicholas") |
Stop. Who would cross the Bridge of Death must answer me these questions three, ___ the other side he see. |
Sometimes I ain't so sho who's got ___ a right to say when a man is crazy and when he ain't" (William Faulkner) |
Oh, how with more than dreams the soul is torn / ___ sleep comes down to soothe the weary eyes" (Paul Laurence Dunbar) |