Answer: POOR
POOR is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted 176 times.
- Needy
- Opposite of rich
- "D"
- D
- Impoverished
- Hard up
- Flat busted
- Robin's beneficiaries
- Poverty-stricken
- Robin Hood's beneficiaries
- Inept
- Hood's beneficiaries, with "the"
- Meager
- Like Ali Baba, at first
- Hardscrabble
- Mean
- Unfortunate
- Description of 15-Down
- Not even fair
- Like a church mouse
- What F may mean
- Hapless
- Worth a D
- "Give me your tired, your ___..."
- Worth a D, maybe
- Not up to snuff
- Destitute
- Like the proverbial church mouse
- Strapped
- Like Richard and Yorick?
- Earning a low grade
- Indigent
- Penniless
- "Give me your tired, your ___ ..." (Emma Lazarus)
- Those that Robin Hood protected
- Like Robin Hood's beneficiaries
- Below C level?
- Robin Hood's beneficiaries, with "the"
- Lousy
- D-worthy
- Word with box or boy
- Third-rate
- What a "D" may indicate
- Unskilled
- Pathetic
- Low-quality
- Unsatisfactory
- Inferior
- Zero-star
- Fifth-rate
- Deserving a D
- Substandard
- Shoddy
- Hood's beneficiaries (with ''the'')
- ''Alas, ___ Yorick!''
- Little rich girl adjective
- Impecunious
- Like church mice
- Very out-of-pocket
- Like Franklin's Richard
- In want
- Church mouse descriptor
- "___ Richard's Almanac"
- Word with mouth or excuse
- Very out of pocket
- Flimsy, as an excuse
- Like Yorick
- Pathetic, as an excuse
- Of inferior quality
- Standard's partner
- Like church mice?
- "Give me your tired, your ___ ..."
- Not flush
- Beneficiaries of Robin Hood
- "Alas, ___ Yorick!"
- Hood's beneficiaries (with "the")
- Far less than loaded
- Devoid of dinero
- Penniless, maybe
- "Rich Man, ___ Man"
- Not so hot
- Deserving of a D, say
- Like a D-
- In need
- Lacking funds
- Worthy of a low grade
- Ones protected by a safety net, with "the"
- "Alas ___ Yorick ..."
- In need of charity
- Less than fair
- Adjective for the little rich girl?
- Like some excuses
- Moneyless
- What "D" means
- Among the have-nots
- Start of a word ladder whose first and last words are suggested by 36-Across
- Far from wealthy
- Worse than fair
- What one star may mean
- What a "D" often means
- Shoddy in quality
- Slipshod
- See 38-Across
- With empty pockets
- Not good
- Inadequate
- "You ___ thing!"
- Far from rolling in dough
- Like D's, gradewise
- Far from flush
- ___ Tax: $15 Monopoly fee
- Below par
- Lacking money
- Without funds
- Opposite of wealthy
- Lacking riches
- Disadvantaged
- Third-class
- Deficient
- Far from rich
- Earning a D
- Hardly worth millions
- Far below par
- Lame, as an excuse
- Lousy grade
- Far from inspired
- Shabby, as an excuse
- Like a proverbial church mouse
- Like a young Jay Gatsby
- Hardly rich
- Lacking cash
- Insufficient
- Worth an F
- Lame
- With very little in one's bank account
- Like the Clampetts, at first
- Subpar
- "How ___ are they that have not patience!": Iago
- Deserving one star, perhaps
- On one's uppers
- Have-nots, with "the"
- Eligible for food stamps
- U-turn from wealthy
- Like a D, gradewise
- Paltry
- Not well done
- Extremely out of pocket
- Perpetually broke
- Meriting a "D," say
- Below average
- Not at all rich
- Worthy of a D
- Not satisfactory at all
- Like a lame excuse
- Like Richard of Almanack fame
- Far below fine
- Not good at all
- Describing a "D" grade
- Of low quality
- Below 71-Across
- Rich's opposite
- Like a grade of D
- Like a "D" grade
- ___ People's Campaign
- Word before "form" or "thing"
- Not up to expectations
- "___ Unfortunate Souls" (solo for Ursula)
- The ___ People's Campaign (1968 economic justice campaign)
- Not great
- Barely passable
- 1 on a scale of 1 to 5, maybe
- Like a one-star review
- Below C level, say
- "___ Unfortunate Souls"
- "___ Things": Oscar-winning Lanthimos film
- "Aww, ___ baby!"