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protende
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The answer PROTENDE has 0 possible clue(s) in existing crosswords.
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The word PROTENDE is NOT valid in any word game. (Sorry, you cannot play PROTENDE in Scrabble, Words With Friends etc)
There are 8 letters in PROTENDE ( D2E1N1O1P3R1T1 )
To search all scrabble anagrams of PROTENDE, to go: PROTENDE?
Rearrange the letters in PROTENDE and see some winning combinations
Scrabble results that can be created with an extra letter added to PROTENDE
6 letters out of PROTENDE
5 letters out of PROTENDE
4 letters out of PROTENDE
DEEP
DEER
DEET
DENE
DENT
DERE
DOER
DONE
DOPE
DORE
DORP
DOTE
DREE
DROP
ERNE
NEED
NEEP
NERD
NODE
NOPE
NOTE
OPED
OPEN
PEED
PEEN
PEER
PEND
PENT
PEON
PERE
PERT
POET
POND
PONE
PORE
PORN
PORT
PREE
PROD
REDE
REDO
REED
REND
RENT
REPO
RETE
RODE
ROPE
ROTE
TEED
TEEN
TEND
TERN
TOED
TONE
TOPE
TORE
TORN
TREE
TROD
TROP
3 letters out of PROTENDE
Searching in Dictionaries ...
Definitions of protende in various dictionaries:
No definitions found
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Protende might refer to |
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A pretender is one who is able to maintain a claim that they are entitled to a position of honour or rank, which may be occupied by an incumbent (usually more recognised), or whose powers may currently be exercised by another person or authority. Most often, it refers to a former monarch, or descendant thereof, whose throne is occupied or claimed by a rival or has been abolished.The term "claimant" is sometimes preferred, but the term "pretend" in itself is not pejorative in this context. The original meaning of the English word pretend comes from the French word prétendre (and before that, the Latin praetendo meaning "to stretch out before"), and originally meant "to put forward, to profess or claim". A pretender was, therefore, simply one who put forward or professed a claim to a title or, in modern terms, a claimant. Only later did the word acquire its modern sense of professing or claiming falsely. * The term "pretender" applies to claimants with arguably genuine rights (as the various pretenders of the Wars of the Roses who regarded the de facto monarch as a usurper). It can also be used for those possessing an arguable right to a position who do not actively claim it, as well as impostors with wholly fabricated claims (as pretenders to Henry VII's throne Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck attest). People in the latter category often assume the identities of deceased or missing royalty to support their claim, and are sometimes referred to for clarity as false pretenders or royal impersonators. A pretender to the title of Pope is called an antipope. |