Answer: SIR
SIR is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted 581 times.
- Herr, here
- How to address a knight
- Guinness title
- Madam's mate
- ___ Winston Churchill
- ___ Roger de Coverley (country dance)
- Sidney Poitier title role
- Base address
- Round Table address
- "Mister!"
- Knight
- Military address
- Knight, by definition
- "Yes, ___!"
- Elton John, e.g.
- Word for a superior
- Word said with a salute
- Gent
- Walter Raleigh, for one
- Lady's man
- What to call a sergeant
- What to call a baronet
- Yes and no follower
- Private's greeting
- What Marcie called 52-Down
- Round Table title
- Francis Drake, for one
- Knight's title
- Mister
- Raleigh, for one
- Knight's address
- "Yes" follower
- Elton John, since 1998
- Yes or no follower
- Charlie Chaplin title
- "My dear man"
- Paul McCartney, for one
- "To ___ With Love"
- Chaplin title
- ___ Barton (first Triple Crown winner)
- What to call a knight
- "Hey, mister!"
- "Dear" one
- Camelot honorific
- What to call an officer
- Poitier role
- Churchill, for one
- Hardly an ordinary Joe
- Kingly honoree
- Paul McCartney title
- Headmaster's title
- What a person may become when kneeling
- “Dear” letter recipient
- McCartney title
- Respectful term
- What to call an officer, maybe
- Madam's partner
- Person touched on the shoulder?
- My dear man
- Title for Isaac Newton
- Madam's counterpart
- Frequent word after yes or no
- Officer's honorific
- General address
- "My dear fellow"
- Title for Michael Caine
- Walter Scott title
- How every letter to The Economist begins
- English title
- Word before and after "yes"
- Round Table honorific
- Fine fellow
- Title for 48-Across and 3-Down
- Business letter recipient?
- Terse letter opener
- Quaint letter start
- Word often following yes or no
- What 16-Across has been called since 1998
- Knight address
- Francis Drake's title
- Officer or knight
- Walter Scott's title
- Peppermint Patty, to Marcie
- What not to call a sergeant
- Title for Charles Chaplin
- Noble title
- Hitchcock title
- Officer's address
- Title for McCartney
- Title for Elton John
- Galahad's title
- Lancelot's title
- "Yes, ___, may I have another!"
- Respectful title
- Mick Jagger's title
- Rudolf Bing's title
- Arthur Conan Doyle's title
- Elton John or Paul McCartney
- "To ___, with Love"
- Mick Jagger, for one
- Diplomatic address
- Esteemed title
- Arthur Conan Doyle title
- Churchill's title
- Dubbed one
- British title
- Private address
- Mick Jagger or Paul McCartney
- Polite title
- "___ Gawain and the Green Knight"
- Elton John or Alec Guinness
- He's a knight person
- Title for Guinness and Gielgud
- "Aye aye, ___!"
- Formal address
- Title for Elton John or Paul McCartney
- Paul McCartney's address
- Conferred word
- General's address
- What Marcie calls Peppermint Patty
- Title for Olivier, Newton, or John
- General address?
- What to call a superior officer
- ___ Huon (1906 Kentucky Derby winner)
- Title for Roger Moore
- U2's Bono, since 2007
- Tristan's title
- McCartney, e.g.
- Knightly title
- General, to a specialist
- Title before a given name
- Common honorific
- Word after yes or dear
- Captain's honorific
- ___ Speedy (rival of Kinko's)
- Title of respect
- "Brave ___ Robin" ("Spamalot" song)
- Paul McCartney, e.g.
- "To __ With Love"
- Baronet's title
- Boot camp address
- Courteous address
- Alan Greenspan, for one
- Title for Sean Connery
- Polite address
- McCartney's title
- Prestigious address
- Elton's title
- Walter Raleigh's title
- Chivalrous title
- Dear one?
- Indicator of general respect
- Address heard while kneeling
- Formal title
- Dubbing title
- Address for Isaac Newton
- Raleigh's title
- Army address
- Recruit's sentence ender
- __ Anthony Hopkins
- Mick Jagger title
- Military term of address
- What corporals call colonels
- Word of respect
- Title for Lancelot
- Title for Churchill
- Polite word
- Title for Connery
- How to address McCartney
- Title for Mick Jagger
- __ Sean Connery
- Lancelot or Raleigh title
- Business letter addressee, perhaps
- Jagger title
- Memorable Poitier role
- Novelist Haggard's title
- Word after "aye, aye"
- Word for a male superior
- Word that's conferred
- Hitchcock title?
- Galahad's address
- Michael Caine's address
- ''Dear'' one
- Alfred Hitchcock title?
- Polite term of address
- Title for Arthur Conan Doyle
- ''To ___, With Love'' (1967)
- Salutation for Edmund Hillary
- Elton John or Paul McCartney, e.g.
- Actor Hopkins, for one
- Title for a knight
- Honorific for McCartney
- Title for Walter Scott
- "To __, With Love"
- ___ Mix-a-Lot
- Title that's conferred
- Title for Branson
- Roger Moore's title
- Private's byword
- Dear one
- Sidney Poitier character
- Address for Ben Kingsley
- One of Elton John's titles
- Kingly address
- How to address a baronet
- Jagger or John
- Word heard at boot camp
- Word with "yes" or "dear"
- Mick Jagger or Paul McCartney, e.g.
- Connery or McKellen
- Poitier's Thackeray
- Knightly honorific
- Gielgud or Guinness
- Jousting title?
- Elton John's title
- Singer John's title
- Word said with a salute, sometimes
- Elton John title
- Dear ___ or Madam
- Stevie Wonder's Ellington tribute "___ Duke"
- "Dear ___ or Madam"
- What to call a sergeant, perhaps
- Patrick Stewart, as of 2010
- Anthony Hopkins, for one
- Title for McCartney and Jagger
- Term of respect
- "Dear ___ or madam ..."
- "My dear ___"
- Officer, to a soldier
- Business letter addressee
- Title for Galahad
- Paul McCartney or Elton John
- Walter Raleigh or Walter Scott
- Word said with a salute, often
- Title for one being dubbed
- Letter start
- Private's word for an officer
- Knighted one
- Dubbed one's title
- "Dear" one in a business letter
- Title for Francis Drake
- Common military address
- Title for Paul McCartney
- Title of nobility
- Elton John's address
- Hitchcock's title
- Poitier title role
- Dear letter recipient
- "To ___, With Love" (1967)
- Title for Gilbert or Sullivan
- Title for Mick or Elton
- Michael Caine's title
- ___ Sean Connery
- ___ Anthony Hopkins
- Sean Connery title
- "Dear" addressee
- Title for one to be dubbed
- Respectful address
- Stevie Wonder's "___ Duke"
- Title for McKellen or McCartney
- Virgin's Richard Branson, e.g.
- Yes follower, often
- Ben Kingsley's title
- Mr. Whoever-You-Are
- Letter opener
- Title for Edmund Hillary
- Title for Edmund Hillary
- Yes ____!
- Title
- Business letter addressee, sometimes
- Gentleman
- ___ Barton, first Triple Crown winner, 1919
- Manly title of respect
- Classic Sidney Poitier title role
- Army address
- Service address
- Polite address for a man
- Title for Anthony Hopkins
- Robin of Locksley, e.g.
- Word preceding Elton or Winston
- What colonels call generals
- "Yes, general?"
- UK title
- Cavalier fellow
- Gentleman's address
- Knightly address
- Knight title
- Address for the general
- Letter starter
- Gentle-manly address
- Ma'am's counterpart
- Private address?
- Lady's man?
- Male title
- Ma'am's mate
- Baronet's address
- 'Aye, aye' follower
- 'Yes, ___!'
- Brit's title
- Title for a Brit
- Title for 98-Down
- Man's address
- 92-Across's counterpart
- See 61-Across
- Address for a man
- Barracks address
- Title given to Galahad
- Gentleman's title
- Knight, e.g
- Francis Drake, Isaac Newton or Mix-a-Lot
- Winston or Walter
- Military title?
- Geraint's title
- "___ Charles" (Barkley's nickname)
- Guy's address
- Officer's title
- Any Knight
- Isaac Newton, e.g.
- See 65-Across
- Word accompanying a salute
- Elton John or Mick Jagger
- Formal greeting
- Title for Doyle
- Address for 33-Across
- Term of address that might make you feel old
- Private's reply
- "My good man"
- Jagger's title
- Knight's honorific
- Oft-heard boot camp word
- Ian Mckellen's title
- Good thing to call an elderly gentleman
- To whom it may concern?
- Chaplin's title
- "Star Wars" title
- Conan Doyle title
- Mark Thackeray, to his students, in a 1967 film
- Mix-A-Lot title
- Title at the Round Table
- Address form?
- Word after "Permission to speak freely"
- "I do hereby dub thee ..." title
- Address for a knight
- Madam's fellow addressee
- Elton John, for one
- 77 Across counterpart
- Title for U2's Bono
- Alfred Hitchcock title
- Title for John Gielgud
- Title for Laurence Olivier
- With 39-Across and 58-Down, response to a military command
- See 11-Down
- Cry with a salute
- Drill sergeant's address
- Old letter opener
- "Aye, aye ___!"
- Drill sergeant's title, often
- Titled Brit
- Man's title
- Title for a superior
- Man with a title
- One who's been tapped on the shoulder?
- Bestowed title
- Rugby official, whether male or female
- "No ___!"
- Drill sergeant's title
- Dame's counterpart
- Title for Walter Raleigh
- Headmaster honorific
- "The Adventures of ___ Lancelot"
- Title for golf's Nick Faldo
- Rap's ___ Mix-a-Lot
- "Dear" one, in a letter
- Hemingway title word
- Anthony Hopkins or Patrick Stewart
- Address for many officers
- Anthony Hopkins title
- Galahad or Gawain
- Private response?
- Officer, to a grunt
- Dubbed man
- British Empire honoree
- Cumference of the Round Table?
- Frequent word from a valet
- Boot-camp sentence ender
- Gent's address
- Title for 18-Down
- Paul, Elton or Bono
- Gentlemanly address
- ___ Lancelot
- 'Dear' man
- ___ Arth
- Titled man
- Title for Winston Churchill
- Title for Edward Elgar
- "Thank you ___, may I have another!"
- See 109-Across
- Polite address for gentlemen
- How Marcie addresses Peppermint Patty
- What Marcie calls Peppermint Patty in "Peanuts"
- Alec Guinness's title
- Word before Edmond or Winston
- Title for Noël Coward
- Title for Conan Doyle
- Title given to Hitchcock
- Title teacher in a 1967 film
- "Yes, ___"
- Title for Paul McCartney or Mick Jagger
- Dubbed dude
- Newton address
- Title given to Poitier
- Thoroughbred Barton's title
- Manly address
- Lancelot
- Michael Caine title
- Ma'am's escort
- Title for McCartney or Jagger
- "Dear" mister
- Title of honor
- Term of address
- "Right honourable" sort
- Mr. Bumble, to Oliver Twist
- Connery title
- Title presented to Poitier
- Walter Scott or Walter Raleigh
- Arthurian address
- Galahad or Lancelot
- "Aaron Burr, ___" ("Hamilton" song with a rhyming title)
- Title bestowed on Gielgud
- Title bestowed on 72-Across
- Title bestowed on John and Jagger
- Superior's address
- "Dear" man
- David Frost's title
- Lancelot, for one
- Title given to Gielgud
- Word before and after "yes," in the Army
- Title in a Poitier title
- Polite word to call a gentleman
- Business letter addressees
- "Hey, fella?"
- "Aaron Burr, ___" ("Hamilton" song)
- Respectful word
- Title for actor Gielgud
- Title for 18-Across
- Poitier, since 1974
- Certain honorific for men
- ___ Paul McCartney
- Male honorific
- The blue guy, to waiter Grover
- Camelot title
- Beatle Paul's title
- One who's been tapped on the shoulder
- Sergeant's address
- Title for the Kinks' Ray Davies
- Title bestowed on Rod Stewart in 2016
- What CPOs call captains
- Knight's title of respect
- Gawain's title
- Newton designation
- Title for Caine
- "Dear fellow"
- 'Fine fellow'
- Knighted one, e.g.
- Elton or Winston preceder
- Address for Raleigh
- Word before and after "no"
- Solti's title
- Ringo Starr's title
- Headmaster address
- Dubbed Hitchcock
- Title for Elton
- "Dear" guy
- Pinero's title
- New title for Ringo Starr
- Gentlemanly title
- Title for 60-Down
- British knight's title
- Title for two Beatles
- Address in a mess
- Tennis pro Andy Murray, since 2017
- "Mr." alternative
- Menuhin's title
- Title for Jagger or John
- Man just after kneeling?
- Title for Charlie Chaplin
- Lieutenant, to a private
- "Mister"
- Noël Coward, for one
- Title given Ringo this year
- Pentagon address
- Kindly gentleman
- Mister relative
- Its East African equivalent is "bwana"
- Rushdie, since 2007
- Newton, for one
- Follower of yes or no in the military
- Paul McCartney or Ringo Starr
- Address for Hitchcock
- ___ Toby, character in "Twelfth Night"
- Title for Barry Gibb as of 2018
- "Kind ___" (term of politeness)
- Word before and after yes, in the military
- Address for a 1-Across, perhaps
- Jagger or McCartney
- Tennis' Andy Murray's title
- Newton honorific
- Beyonce's son, whose name is a title
- "___ Duke" (Stevie Wonder song)
- Common base word
- It may precede and follow yes
- Title for Patrick Stewart
- Polite way to address a man
- Title for Jagger
- British honorific
- Address for some generals
- Title for Daniel Day-Lewis
- Mr. ___ (counselor in "Holes")
- Title for tennis great Andy Murray
- Title for 14 Across
- Title reportedly turned down by Stephen Hawking
- "Aaron Burr, ___" (song from "Hamilton")
- New title for Michael Palin
- Address for a certain general
- Title for 17-Across
- "Dude," more formally
- How Marcie addresses Peppermint Patty, for no apparent reason
- Preceder/follower of "yes"
- Title for Paul McCartney or Elton John
- "My dear ___" (old letter opener)
- Title for Ian McKellen
- "Aaron Burr, ___"
- Stevie Wonder hit "___ Duke"
- Title for Richard Starkey
- Prestigious British address?
- Follower of yes or no
- Title for Paul or Ringo
- Title for the entitled, maybe
- Title for Tom Jones
- Title for Ringo Starr
- Courtly title
- Honorary title
- Lord's title
- ___ Barton, first Triple Crown horse (1919)
- Dear fellow
- ___ Elton John
- "___ Duke" (1976 Stevie Wonder hit)
- "For once maybe someone will call me '___,' without adding, 'You're making a scene'": Homer Simpson
- Title for a Knight Grand Cross
- Title for Nick Faldo
- Apt anagram of sri
- Marcie's nickname for Peppermint Patty
- Polite address common in the South
- Title equivalent to Dame
- Formal term of address
- Lancelot or Mix-a-Lot
- Title bestowed on Mick Jagger in 2003 (although the queen refused to present the award herself)
- Ben Kingsley or Ian McKellen, e.g.
- Entitled Brit?
- "My dear man …"
- Title for Geraint or Gawain
- Title for Lancelot and Mix-a-Lot
- "___, this is a Wendy's"
- Polite thing to call someone
- Bwana : Swahili :: ___ : English
- "___ Cumference and the First Round Table" (punny math book)
- ___ yes, ___
- Title for Andy Murray
- Patrick Stewart's title
- What the Portuguese "senhor" means
- Title for Mo Farah
- Title for Lewis Hamilton
- Post-dubbing title
- Title for Walter Scott or Isaac Newton
- "Which one of Arthur's knights built the Round Table? ___ Cumference!" (groaner)
- Percival of legend, for one
- Title of a medieval tale?
- Andrew Lloyd Webber title
- Isaac Newton, from the age of 62 onward
- Salutation in a salute
- "Please, ___, I want some more"