Category: Mirror Quiz Crossword Answers
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Mirror quiz Crossword Answers -28-March-2024 |
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- 1.2014 novel by Amy Reed
- 2.1976 novel by Tom Sharpe
- 3.Unit of length equal to twelve inches
- 4.Port on the River Tyne opposite Newcastle
- 5.Common Eurasian rail of fields and meadows with light yellowish-brown plumage
- 6.Federal US bureau created in 1947 to conduct espionage activities
- 7.Temperate tree or large shrub with rounded leaves and edible brown nuts
- 8.Emile —, French author of novels Germinal and Therese Raquin
- 9.1913 novel by Sax Rohmer
- 10.Slender fish of the snake mackerel family with an almost uniformly dark brown body
- 11.Dennis —, 1971 winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics for the invention of holography
- 12.Central space in a church
- 13.Jean-Philippe —, French composer of 1733 opera Hippolyte et Aricie
- 14.Jo —, 2014 European Championships 10,000m gold medallist for Great Britain
- 15.Tiina —, 1983 World Championships javelin gold medallist
- 16.Idris —, actor who played the title role in BBC TV drama series Luther
- 17.Japanese dish of cold cakes of rice with a topping of raw fish
- 18.Justin —, Wales and Ospreys flanker; 2013 and 2017 British and Irish Lions tourist
- 19.Republic in West Africa known as Portuguese Guinea until 1974
- 20.Spencer —, British prime minister assassinated in 1812
- 21.Australian acacia tree with yellow ball-shaped flowers
- 22.Johannes —, Bavaria-born winner of the 1919 Nobel Prize in Physics
- 23.South American republic; capital Montevideo
- 24.Ty —, Detroit Tigers baseball player and manager known as The Georgia Peach
- 25.1996 film drama starring Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche
- 26.Evergreen or deciduous tree or shrub whose fruit is the acorn
- 27.Stephen —, Best Actor in a Leading Role Oscar nominee for The Crying Game
- 28.Perennial submerged marine plant of the genus Zostera with long narrow green leaves
- 29.— Mountains, range in North Africa whose highest peak is Toubkal
- 30.City in Croatia on the eastern shores of the Adriatic Sea
- 31.First king of Israel in the Old Testament
- 32.Phillips —, 2009 World Championships triple jump gold medallist
- 33.Roberto —, 1972-79 WBA Lightweight champion nicknamed Hands of Stone
- 34.Alberto —, author of novels Contempt and The Indifferent Ones
- 35.Unfermented soya-bean curd eaten as a foodstuff
- 36.Jason —, US winner of the 2013 PGA Championship
- 37.Marine crustacean with a slender flattened body and large tail
- 38.New Zealand golfer; 2008 Johnnie Walker Classic tournament winner
- 39.Danny —, former Sale Sharks and Wasps fly-half signed by Gloucester Rugby for 2018-19; 2008 England Test debutant against Wales
- 40.Founder of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields chamber orchestra in 1958
- 41.— National Park, part of the Willandra Lakes Region in New South Wales, Australia
- 42.1987 film thriller starring Mickey Rourke and Robert De Niro
- 43.Albrecht —, German Renaissance painter and theorist whose engravings include 1514's Saint Jerome in His Study
- 44.Capital of Manitoba, Canada
- 45.Derek —, National Coal Board chairman from 1972-82
- 46.Small pasta squares containing meat and cheese
- 47.1960s BBC TV adventure series starring Gerald Harper in the title role
- 48.1922 children's book by Ruth Plumly Thompson
- 49.Leon —, Russian inventor in 1920 of an electronic musical instrument that bears his name
- 50.1944 historical romance novel by Kathleen Winsor
- 51.Charles Strouse and Martin Charnin show; 1977 Tony Award winner for Best Musical and Best Original Score
- 52.2001 biopic starring Johnny Depp as George Jung
- 53.Musical technique; the simultaneous sounding of two or more parts or melodies
- 54.Son of Laius and Jocasta in Greek mythology
- 55.Town in Xinjiang, China, north of the Kunlun Mountains; an early centre of Buddhism
- 56.Breed of sheep with long fine wool originally raised in Spain
- 57.Large edible game fish of the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific
- 58.1996 film thriller starring Mel Gibson and Rene Russo
- 59.US group founded by Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards whose self-titled debut album was released in 1977
- 60.Theme park at Walt Disney World Resort, Bay Lake, Florida, opened in 1982
- 61.Chief port and economic capital of Ivory Coast
- 62.T S Eliot verse drama first performed in 1935
- 63.Pop group who recorded 2017 no 2 album Tears on the Dancefloor
- 64.Group of 12 dozen
- 65.Spiral tube of the inner ear that converts sound vibrations into nerve impulses
- 66.Most northerly of the Shetland Islands in Scotland
- 67.1983 biopic starring Mary Steenburgen as Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
- 68.Artifical waterway opened in 1822 running from Falkirk to Edinburgh, Scotland
- 69.Ken —, US television chef whose books include Travels with a Hot Wok
- 70.Actress who played Sloane Peterson in 1986 comedy film Ferris Bueller's Day Off
- 71.1947 debut novel by Mickey Spillane whose protagonist is Mike Hammer
- 72.1997 sci-fi film starring Jodie Foster and Matthew McConaughey
- 73.Mediterranean island; capital Valletta
- 74.Capital of Gard, France, whose Roman remains include the Maison Carree
- 75.Emile —, animated cartoon film pioneer whose works include 1908's Fantasmagorie
- 76.Flammable liquid hydrocarbon used in the manufacture of plastic
- 77.Lower chamber of Tynwald, the legislature of the Isle of Man
- 78.Wim —, director of film dramas Hammett, The Million Dollar Hotel and Paris, Texas
- 79.Guy —, actor who portrayed King Edward VIII in 2010 biopic The King's Speech
- 80.Unit of weight equal to 50g used in China
- 81.Hungarian stew of meat and vegetables seasoned with paprika
- 82.Jimmy —, London-based shoe and handbag designer
- 83.Former secret police in East Germany
- 84.The —, 2007 action film starring Jamie Foxx and Chris Cooper
- 85.Medium-sized wading bird with a long straight bill
- 86.Horse that won the Hennessy Gold Cup at Leopardstown a record four times between 1999 and 2004
- 87.2003 novel by Tom Clancy
- 88.Venetian gentleman in William Shakespeare play Othello
- 89.Department of France; capital Lille
- 90.1990 film starring Jeff Daniels and Judith Ivey
- 91.River rising in northern France that flows through Belgium into the North Sea at Nieuwpoort
- 92.Administrative headquarters of Essex
- 93.1962 opera by Michael Tippett based on Homer's Iliad
- 94.Movement disorder affecting golfers
- 95.Aromatic Eurasian plant whose leaves are used for flavouring in pickles
- 96.The —, 1974 children's book by Jill Murphy
- 97.Tracy-Ann —, actress who played Chrissie Watts in BBC TV soap EastEnders
- 98.Giuseppe —, composer of 1851 opera Rigoletto
- 99.Very short skirt worn by a ballerina
- 100.Mountain range in south central Europe
- 101.Martin —, 2005, 2007 and 2008 winner of the London Marathon
- 102.2009 novel by Danielle Steel
- 103.Largest city in Saudi Arabia
- 104.Terrestrial newt such as the red — of North America
- 105.Yachting and fishing resort in southeast Florida, US
- 106.Mary —, first actress to play Romana in BBC TV series Doctor Who
- 107.Department of southeast France; capital Grenoble
- 108.Dorothy —, actress who played the title role in 1958 biopic The Bonnie Parker Story
- 109.1976-81 BBC TV drama series starring James Bolam as Jack Ford
- 110.Coniferous tree of New Zealand also called a red pine
- 111.City and major railway junction in Guntur, Andhra Pradesh, India, near the Krishna River delta
- 112.Russian daily newspaper founded in 1917 as the official organ of the government
- 113.Patricia Highsmith novel first published in 1951 as The Price of Salt under pseudonym Claire Morgan
- 114.Norwegian town; 1994 Winter Olympic Games host city
- 115.Andrew —, Best Actor in a Leading Role Oscar nominee for Hacksaw Ridge
- 116.Ruth —, New York City-born monologist whose repertoire included The Italian Lesson and Opening a Bazaar
- 117.Eighth letter of the Greek alphabet
- 118.1977 novel by Robin Cook
- 119.Sharon —, actress who replaced Meg Foster as Christine Cagney in US television series Cagney and Lacey
- 120.Attilio —, 1990-97 Italy midfielder; Sampdoria 1990 European Cup Winners' Cup Final winner
- 121.The —, 1922 stage play by Noel Coward
- 122.Battle of —, conflict of the American Civil War fought in July, 1863
- 123.Stand-up comedian who performs as The Pub Landlord
- 124.1995 novel by Iain Banks
- 125.Port in southwest Republic of Ireland at the mouth of the River Lee
- 126.Another name for the eardrum
- 127.The —, 1955 novel by Leon Uris
- 128.Rod —, tennis player; 1962 and 1969 calendar-year Grand Slam winner
- 129.West Yorkshire town northwest of Bradford on the River Worth
- 130.Actress who played Chardonnay Lane-Pascoe in ITV drama series Footballers' Wives
- 131.Republic in South America; capital Georgetown
- 132.2016 animated film starring the voice talent of Matthew McConaughey and Reese Witherspoon
- 133.Waterbird of Europe, Asia and North America with a white bill and forehead
- 134.The —, 1989 action film starring Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio
- 135.Area in the London Borough of Haringey that shares its name with a 1980 Stephen King short story
- 136.Chewy sweet containing chopped nuts and cherries
- 137.Frank —, Canada-born architect who designed the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain
- 138.Natalie —, singer and actress who played Lorna Campbell in 2003 film Johnny English
- 139.Rafe —, actor who portrayed William Holman Hunt in 2009 BBC TV drama series Desperate Romantics
- 140.Charles —, Home Secretary from 2004-06
- 141.Marilyn —, singer and actress who played Sugar Kane Kowalczyk in 1959 film comedy Some Like It Hot
- 142.Town in Kent; one of the original Cinque Ports
- 143.Actor who played the title role in 1937 film drama Elephant Boy
- 144.1991 stage play by Edward Albee; 1994 Pulitzer Prize for Drama winner
- 145.David —, Best Director Oscar winner for The Bridge on the River Kwai
- 146.Friedrich —, German poet who authored stage plays The Robbers and Maria Stuart
- 147.Best Actress in a Leading Role Oscar nominee for My Man Godfrey
- 148.London-born ventriloquist whose dolls included Lord Charles
- 149.Genus of flowering plants in the grass family grown for grain and fodder
- 150.Oily secretion of the sebaceous glands