Enthusiastic

This time we are looking on the crossword clue for: Enthusiastic.
it’s A 12 letters crossword puzzle definition. See the possibilities below.

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Possible Answers: AGOG, AVID, EAGER, KEEN, NUTS, GAGA, RABID, ARDENT, CANDO, RAHRAH, ONFIRE, SPIRITED, ZEALOUS, GUNGHO, READYANDWILLING, FERVID, ROUSING, ALLWORKEDUPOVER.

Last seen on the crossword puzzle: –Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Feb 19 2024

Last seen on: –L.A. Times Daily Crossword – Dec 22 2022
Newsday Crossword November 15 2022 Answer List
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Nov 12 2022
L.A. Times Daily Crossword – Sep 16 2022
USA Today Crossword – Sep 5 2022
Newsday.com Crossword – Mar 29 2022s
USA Today Crossword – Mar 22 2022
USA Today Crossword – Mar 20 2022
USA Today Crossword – Jan 19 2022
LA Times Crossword 20 Dec 21, Monday
Universal Crossword – Aug 22 2021
Newsday.com Crossword – Aug 8 2021
Newsday.com Crossword – Jan 6 2021
LA Times Crossword 10 Dec 20, Thursday
USA Today Crossword – Oct 7 2020
NY Times Crossword 21 Sep 20, Monday
NY Times Crossword 21 Sep 20, Monday
Universal Crossword – Sep 20 2020
Newsday.com Crossword – May 6 2020
The Sun – Two Speed Crossword – Jan 21 2020
NY Times Crossword 8 Sep 19, Sunday
Newsday.com Crossword – Jun 12 2019
NY Times Crossword 11 Jun 19, Tuesday
Newsday.com Crossword – Jun 3 2019
Newsday.com Crossword – Apr 16 2019
Universal Crossword – Jan 16 2019
Newsday.com Crossword – Jan 10 2019
LA Times Crossword 2 Oct 18, Tuesday
The Washington Post Crossword – Oct 2 2018
The Washington Post Crossword – Sep 19 2018
LA Times Crossword 19 Sep 18, Wednesday
Newsday.com Crossword – Sep 9 2018
Wall Street Journal Crossword – Jul 7 2018 – For the Record

Random information on the term “AVID”:

Avid Technology (often known and stylized as Avid) is an American technology and multimedia company founded in August 1987 by Bill Warner, based in Burlington, Massachusetts. It specializes in audio and video; specifically, digital non-linear editing (NLE) systems, management and distribution services.

Avid products are now used in the television and video industry to create television shows, feature films, and commercials. Media Composer, a professional software-based non-linear editing system, is Avid’s flagship product.

Avid was founded by a marketing manager from Apollo Computer, Bill Warner, a prototype of their first digital nonlinear editing system (the Avid/1) was shown in a private suite at the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) convention in April 1988. The Avid/1 was based on an Apple Macintosh II computer, with special hardware and software of Avid’s own design installed.

At the NAB show in April 1989, the Avid/1 was publicly introduced. It was “the biggest shake-up in editing since Melies played around with time and sequences in the early 1900s”. By the early 1990s, Avid products began to replace such tools as the Moviola, Steenbeck, and KEM flatbed editors, allowing editors to handle their film creations with greater ease. The first feature film edited using the Avid was Let’s Kill All the Lawyers in 1992, directed by Ron Senkowski. The film was edited at 30fps NTSC rate, then used Avid MediaMatch to generate a negative cutlist from the EDL. The first feature film edited natively at 24fps with what was to become the Avid Film Composer was Emerson Park. The first studio film to be edited at 24fps was Lost in Yonkers, directed by Martha Coolidge. By 1994 only three feature films used the new digital editing system. By 1995 dozens had switched to Avid, and it signaled the beginning of the end of cutting celluloid. In 1996 Walter Murch accepted the Academy Award for editing The English Patient (which also won best picture), which he cut on the Avid. This was the first Editing Oscar awarded to a digitally edited film (although the final print was still created with traditional negative cutting).

AVID on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “KEEN”:

Keen is an English surname. It is either of Anglo-Saxon origin, and a nickname surname for someone who is brave, or from the Middle English or Olde English personal name ‘Kene’, which means king. Alternatively, it can be a variation of the Irish surname O’Cahan.

Justice Keen was also the first Chief Justice of the Cherokee Nation. Justice Keen also held Senior Executive positions in the U S department of Indian affairs and the U S department of Justice.

KEEN on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “NUTS”:

A nut is a fruit composed of an inedible hard shell and an edible seed, which is generally edible. In general usage, a wide variety of dried seeds are called nuts, but in a botanical context “nut” implies that the shell does not open to release the seed (indehiscent). The translation of “nut” in certain languages frequently requires paraphrases, as the word is ambiguous.

Most seeds come from fruits that naturally free themselves from the shell, unlike nuts such as hazelnuts, chestnuts, and acorns, which have hard shell walls and originate from a compound ovary. The general and original usage of the term is less restrictive, and many nuts (in the culinary sense), such as almonds, pecans, pistachios, walnuts, and Brazil nuts, are not nuts in a botanical sense. Common usage of the term often refers to any hard-walled, edible kernel as a nut.

A nut in botany is a simple dry fruit with one seed (rarely two) in which the ovary wall becomes increasingly hard as it matures, and where the seed remains unattached or free within the ovary wall. Most nuts come from the pistils with inferior ovaries (see flower) and all are indehiscent (not opening at maturity). True nuts are produced, for example, by some plant families of the order Fagales.

NUTS on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “GAGA”:

Algebraic geometry is the place where the algebra involved in solving systems of simultaneous multivariable polynomial equations meets the geometry of curves, surfaces, and higher dimensional algebraic varieties.

This category has the following 19 subcategories, out of 19 total.

The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 337 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).

GAGA on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “CANDO”:

This category includes articles on organizations based in the U.S. state of South Carolina. Organizations include, among others, voluntary associations and 501(c) non-profit organizations; companies and for-profit organizations, religious organizations, and so on, are also appropriate.

This category has the following 9 subcategories, out of 9 total.

The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).

CANDO on Wikipedia