Smidgen

This time we are looking on the crossword clue for: Smidgen.
it’s A 7 letters crossword puzzle definition. See the possibilities below.

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Possible Answers: ATOM, BIT, IOTA, TAD, DAB, ATAD, TRACE, MITE, JOT, WHIT, DRIB, SPECK, SKOSH, WEEBIT, JUSTATAD.

Last seen on the crossword puzzle: –The New Yorker Thursday, 14 March 2024 Crossword Answers
Daily Gulf News Crossword Answers Thursday, 7 March 2024
NY Times Crossword 20 Feb 24, Tuesday

Last seen on: –The New Yorker Sunday, 21 May 2023 Crossword Answers
Washington Post Crossword Wednesday, January 25, 2023
LA Times Crossword, Wed, Jan 25, 2023
NY Times Crossword 7 Dec 22, Wednesday
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Nov 24 2022
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Jul 16 2022
Wall Street Journal Crossword – March 19 2022 – Talking Smock
LA Times Crossword 20 Dec 21, Monday
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Dec 17 2021
USA Today Crossword – Dec 11 2021
Universal Crossword – Aug 17 2021 Crossword Sollution
Newsday.com Crossword – Jul 31 2021
NY Times Crossword 25 Jul 21, Sunday
USA Today Crossword – Nov 27 2020
NY Times Crossword 10 Nov 20, Tuesday
Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Oct 6 2020
NY Times Crossword 28 Sep 20, Monday
USA Today Crossword – Sep 10 2020
NY Times Crossword 24 Aug 20, Monday
LA Times Crossword 14 Jul 20, Tuesday
Universal Crossword – Apr 29 2020
USA Today Crossword – Feb 23 2020
Newsday.com Crossword – Feb 17 2020
LA Times Crossword 21 Dec 19, Saturday
Daily Celebrity Crossword – 11/8/19 Sports Fan Friday
Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Oct 3 2019
LA Times Crossword 14 Sep 19, Saturday
Wall Street Journal Crossword – September 03 2019 – Hands On
NY Times Crossword 5 Aug 19, Monday
NY Times Crossword 9 Jul 19, Tuesday
LA Times Crossword 4 Dec 18, Tuesday
The Washington Post Crossword – Sep 23 2018
LA Times Crossword 23 Sep 18, Sunday
NY Times Crossword 17 Sep 18, Monday
NY Times Crossword 4 Sep 18, Tuesday
Daily Celebrity Crossword – 7/11/18 Wayback Wednesday
-Daily Celebrity Crossword – 11/30/17 Top 40

Random information on the term “ATOM”:

hAtom is a draft Microformat for marking up (X)HTML, using classes and rel attributes, content on web pages that contain blog entries or similar chronological content. These can then be parsed as feeds in Atom, a web syndication standard.

hAtom is available as version 0.1, released 28 February 2006, and is used widely throughout the Web.

hAtom is also used as the basis for individually subscribable parts of web pages, called Web Slices, which are understood by Internet Explorer 8 and can be understood by Firefox, using third-party add-ons.

The annotations indicated via the hAtom tags added to mark-up determine the portions of content obtained via the Web Slice filter.

ATOM on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “BIT”:

Drill bits are cutting tools used to remove material to create holes, almost always of circular cross-section. Drill bits come in many sizes and shape and can create different kinds of holes in many different materials. In order to create holes drill bits are attached to a drill, which powers them to cut through the workpiece, typically by rotation. The drill will grasp the upper end of a bit called the shank in the chuck.

Drill bits come in standard sizes, described in the drill bit sizes article. A comprehensive drill bit and tap size chart lists metric and imperial sized drill bits alongside the required screw tap sizes. There are also certain specialized drill bits that can create holes with a non-circular cross-section.

While the term drill may refer to either a drilling machine or a drill bit for use in a drilling machine. In this article, for clarity, drill bit or bit is used throughout to refer to a bit for use in a drilling machine, and drill refers always to a drilling machine.

BIT on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “IOTA”:

Latin iota (majuscule: Ɩ, minuscule: ɩ) is a letter of the Latin alphabet, based on the lowercase of the Greek letter iota (ι).

It was formerly used in the International Phonetic Alphabet to represent the vowel in English “bit”. It was replaced by a small capital I (ɪ) in 1989, but it can still be found in use in some later works.

Ɩ has been adopted as a letter in the alphabets of some African languages, such as Kabiyé or Mossi. Its capital form has a hook to distinguish it from capital I. The dotted or accented italic form ɩ is very often indistinguishable from the italic letter small I i in serif fonts.

IOTA on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “TAD”:

Tad is an unincorporated community in Kanawha County, West Virginia, United States. Tad is 7.5 miles (12.1 km) east of Charleston. Tad has a post office with ZIP code 25201.

An early postmaster gave the community the name of his son, Talmadge “Tad” Dunlap.

TAD on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “DAB”:

Dab is a village and union council, an administrative subdivision, of Chakwal District in the Punjab Province of Pakistan, it is part of Chakwal Tehsil and is located at 33°0’0N 72°52’0E

Coordinates: 33°0′0″N 72°5′0″E / 33.00000°N 72.08333°E / 33.00000; 72.08333

DAB on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “TRACE”:

AGILE (Astro‐Rivelatore Gamma a Immagini Leggero) is an X-ray and Gamma ray astronomical satellite of the Italian Space Agency (ASI).

AGILE’s mission is to observe gamma-ray sources in the universe. Key scientific objectives of the AGILE Mission include the study of:

AGILE’s instrumentation includes a Gamma Ray Imaging Detector (GRID) sensitive in the 30 MeV – 50 GeV energy range, a SuperAGILE (SA) hard X-ray monitor sensitive in the 18–60 keV energy range, a Mini-Calorimeter (MCAL) non-imaging gamma-ray scintillation detector sensitive in the 350 keV – 100 MeV energy range, and an Anti-coincidence System (AC), based on a plastic scintillator, to assist with suppressing unwanted background events.

The SuperAGILE SA is an instrument based on a set of four silicon strip detectors, each equipped with one-dimensional coded mask. The SA is designed to detect X-Ray signals from known sources and burst-like signals. It provides long-term monitoring of flux and spectral features. MCAL can also effectively detect high-energy radiation bursts in its energy band.

TRACE on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “MITE”:

Educational institutions established in 2007, or older institutions which were re-founded in 2007.

This category has only the following subcategory.

The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 486 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).

MITE on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “JOT”:

The Jats or sometimes pronounced Jots are members of an ethnic group of itinerant travelers found in Afghanistan. They are a marginalized and stigmatised group, and considered “as blots on the ethnic landscape.” The term “Jat” is an exonym, never used by what are disparate and distinct ethnic groups.

In Afghanistan, the term Jat does not refer to a single ethnic community, but rather to a number of disparate groups who practice a peripatetic lifestyle. Groups who are generally referred to as Jat have their own self-designation, and often resent being called Jat, and being called a Jat is an insult in Afghanistan. In Dari dialect of Kabul, shrewish women were often admonished not to be quarrelsome like a Jat. A comparison would the use of the word Gypsy to refer to the Romany and the word Zott to refer to similar groups in the Middle East. What is unclear is how these distinct groups acquired the name Jat. In neighbouring South Asia, the term Jat refers to a large cluster of agriculture castes, some especially in the Balochistan are connected with camel breeding and herding, and it is possible that the Afghan Jat are descended from peripatetic communities that entered Afghanistan in the company of these nomadic Jats, and acquired the name by association.

JOT on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “WHIT”:

WERN (88.7 FM) is a radio station licensed to Madison, Wisconsin. The station is part of Wisconsin Public Radio (WPR), and is the flagship of WPR’s “NPR News and Classical Network”, consisting of classical music and news and talk programming.

Since Ideas Network flagship WHA must reduce its power to an all-but-unlistenable level at night, WERN airs a simulcast of the Ideas Network on its HD3 channel. This is used to feed a low-powered translator at 90.3 FM for non-HD Radio listeners.

¹Broadcast in Spanish (fulltime)

Coordinates: 43°03′22″N 89°32′06″W / 43.056°N 89.535°W / 43.056; -89.535

WHIT on Wikipedia