See 33-Across

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Possible Answers: FIVE.

Last seen on: –Wall Street Journal Crossword – March 17 2022 – Cutting the Cord
Premier Sunday – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Jan 9 2022
Premier Sunday – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Jan 9 2022
LA Times Crossword 27 Sep 21, Monday
NY Times Crossword 18 Mar 21, Thursday
NY Times Crossword 18 Mar 21, Thursday
NY Times Crossword 28 Jun 20, Sunday
Universal Crossword – May 25 2020
NY Times Crossword 16 Apr 20, Thursday
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Daily Celebrity Crossword – 5/25/18 Sports Fan Friday
NY Times Crossword 20 Dec 2017, Wednesday

Random information on the term “FIVE”:

The Messier objects [me.sje] are a set of 110 astronomical objects first listed by French astronomer Charles Messier in 1771. Messier was a comet hunter, and was frustrated by objects which resembled but were not comets, so he compiled a list of them, in collaboration with his assistant Pierre Méchain, to avoid wasting time on them. The number of objects in the lists he published reached 103, but seven more thought to have been observed by Messier have been added by other astronomers over the years.

A similar list had been published in 1654 by Giovanni Hodierna, but attracted attention only recently and was probably not known to Messier.

The first edition covered 45 objects numbered M1 to M45. The total list published by Messier finally contained 103 objects, but the list was expanded through successive additions by other astronomers, motivated by notes in Messier’s and Méchain’s texts indicating that at least one of them knew of the additional objects. The first such addition came from Nicolas Camille Flammarion in 1921, who added Messier 104 after finding a note Messier made in a copy of the 1781 edition of the catalogue. M105 to M107 were added by Helen Sawyer Hogg in 1947, M108 and M109 by Owen Gingerich in 1960, and M110 by Kenneth Glyn Jones in 1967. M102 was observed by Méchain, who communicated his notes to Messier. Méchain later concluded that this object was simply a re-observation of M101, though some sources suggest that the object Méchain observed was the galaxy NGC 5866 and identify that as M102.

FIVE on Wikipedia