Enter a clue or pattern or both:

The Clue

Talking point? (3 letter answer)

The Answer

JAW

Tags


Notes

The answer JAW is common and appears about once every 225 puzzles.

Related Clues

Gossip
Jabber
Mandible
Maxilla
Yak
Be windy
Boxer's target
Chew the fat
Chew the rag
Gab at length
Head bone
Hinged apparatus
Hook target
Mandible or maxilla
Masseter's locale
Paleontologist's discovery
Part of a vise
Pliers part
Shoot the breeze
Slugger's target
Talk on and on, slangily
Uppercut target
Vise part
Yak or chin
Big part of a crocodile
Hook connection point
Leno's got a big one
Long feature of a crocodile
Part of a dinosaur find
Prominent crocodile feature
Talk, talk, talk
Target of a punch, maybe
Word with bone or breaker
Tyrannosaurus rex had a big one
What the teeth are connected to
Where a sock may go?
It may be cut by an uppercut

Definition

JAW as a noun:

1. the part of the skull of a vertebrate that frames the mouth and holds the teeth
2. the bones of the skull that frame the mouth and serve to open it; the bones that hold the teeth
3. holding device consisting of one or both of the opposing parts of a tool that close to hold an object

JAW as a verb:

1. (chew the fat, shoot the breeze, chat, confabulate, confab, chitchat, chatter, chaffer, natter, gossip, jaw, claver, visit) = talk socially without exchanging too much information; "the men were sitting in the cafe and shooting the breeze"
2. (yack, jaw, yack away, rattle on, yap away) = talk incessantly and tiresomely
3. (chew, masticate, manducate, jaw) = chew (food); "He jawed his bubble gum"; "Chew your food and don't swallow it!"; "The cows were masticating the grass"
4. (call on the carpet, take to task, rebuke, rag, trounce, reproof, lecture, reprimand, jaw, dress down, call down, scold, chide, berate, bawl out, remonstrate, chew out, chew up, have words, lambaste, lambast) = censure severely or angrily; "The mother scolded the child for entering a stranger's car"; "The deputy ragged the Prime Minister"; "The customer dressed down the waiter for bringing cold soup"