Category: The Independents Jumbo General Crossword Answers
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- 1.A creamy pale pink pate from Greece, made from the roe of grey mullet or smoked cod
- 2.The only member to feature on every Pink Floyd album
- 3.Dudley Moore's counterpart of Peter Cook's Clive
- 4.The forward upper part of the skull
- 5.Commercial and industrial city in northwestern Germany with a major port on the River Weser
- 6.The fiancée and muse to English Romantic poet John Keats
- 7.The capital of Japan
- 8.American film actress, born Constance Ockelman, noted for her femme fatale roles in films noirs with Alan Ladd
- 9.Port that is capital of the Marche region of Italy
- 10.The vocal apparatus of the larynx, consisting of the two true vocal cords and the opening between them
- 11.North Wales market town with a 13th-century castle
- 12.Rotterdam-based Dutch football club who won the European Cup in 1969-70
- 13.A person who carries or escorts the coffin at a funeral
- 14.British comedian and radio/TV entertainer born Maurice Cole in 1944
- 15.Room from which the US President makes significant addresses to the nation
- 16.Corner square of a standard Monopoly board
- 17.Jean-Baptiste ___, canonised French priest proclaimed by Pope Pius XII as patron saint of all teachers of youth in 1950
- 18.British diplomat hanged by the British for treason in 1916
- 19.The standard currency unit of Myanmar
- 20.ITV comedy panel game show that was hosted by Barry Cryer
- 21.The periwinkle genus of plants
- 22.Any of several North American plants of the genus Apocynum thought to be poisonous to canines
- 23.Infectious disease caused by the release of toxins from a bacterium, the spores of which are found in soil
- 24.Strong white metallic element whose atomic number is 22
- 25.Conservative prime minister of the UK from 1902 to 1905
- 26.British learning disability charity founded by Judy Fryd in 1946
- 27.Horse that won the 1953 Derby
- 28.1927 Aldwych farce by Ben Travers
- 29.An extinct language of ancient S Italy belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European family
- 30.Polish city on the Warta River
- 31.2008 top ten hit by Danish pop group Alphabeat
- 32.The right to vote
- 33.City in Russia, on the delta of the Volga River, 21m below sea level
- 34.Leslie ___, British tennis player who married Kitty McKane in 1926 and they became the only married couple to win the mixed doubles title at Wimbledon
- 35.Brand of hot sauce produced by the McIlhenny Company of Avery Island, Louisiana
- 36.Platform built parallel to the waterfront at a harbour for the docking, loading and unloading of ships
- 37.Island in the Firth of Clyde whose chief town is Rothesay
- 38.In Greek mythology, a gorgon beheaded by Perseus
- 39.Canadian supermodel who claimed "We don't wake up for less than $10,000 a day"
- 40.Showman who toured Europe and the US with his Wild West Show
- 41.The third studio album by Iron Maiden, released in 1982
- 42.Influential poem by Maya Angelou, first published in 1978
- 43.Kingdom of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy associated with King Offa and Lady Godiva
- 44.Coarse-grained igneous rock widely used for building
- 45.Marx Brother born with the first name Adolph
- 46.The most important prophet in Judaism
- 47.Welsh football club that played at the Vetch Field between 1912 and 2005
- 48.A religious decree issued by a Muslim leader
- 49.A measure of the rate of motion of a body expressed as the rate of change of its position in a particular direction with time
- 50.Country whose capital is Katmandu
- 51.Solar god of Egyptian mythology usually depicted with a falcon's head
- 52.A valved brass instrument normally pitched in B flat
- 53.Assumed name of US surrealist photographer Emmanuel Rudnitsky
- 54.American jazz pianist and bandleader whose bands included his Cherry Blossoms and his Barons of Rhythm
- 55.1960s BBC children's TV series narrated by Oliver Postgate
- 56.American R&B singer-songwriter and actress awarded a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2016
- 57.Shakespearean character who delivers the line "Out, damned spot!"
- 58.Rugby league club that beat St Helens in the 2019 Challenge Cup Final
- 59.Latin name for the onion genus
- 60.Welsh county whose administrative centre is Haverfordwest
- 61.Mild analgesic drug known as acetaminophen in the US
- 62.1971 hit single for Derek and the Dominos
- 63.Country whose capital is Lima
- 64.Derbyshire and England batsman who was one of the five Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1989
- 65.North Somerset town in which former cricketer and umpire Mervyn Kitchen was born
- 66.Dutch football club from Arnhem founded in 1892
- 67.In psychology, the mental process used in thinking and perceiving
- 68.The second largest city in Moldova
- 69.Indigenous people of the Northeastern Woodlands who live in the US and Canada
- 70.Radioactive element discovered in 1952
- 71.In Greek mythology, an enchantress who detained Odysseus on her island and turned his men into swine
- 72.The derived SI unit of power
- 73.American singer, actor and politician who found fame in partnership with his wife Cher
- 74.Lancashire town in the Forest of Rossendale
- 75.1961 song, written by Phil Medley and Bert Berns, originally recorded by the Top Notes and later covered by the Isley Brothers, the Beatles and others
- 76.Low dam built across a river to raise its level or control its flow
- 77.City in Ohio nicknamed "Rubber Capital of the World"
- 78.A large bath used for hydrotherapy, relaxation or pleasure, usually located outdoors
- 79.English nursery rhyme character who "sat on a tuffet"
- 80.Biblical city which, along with Sodom, was destroyed by God for the depravity of its inhabitants
- 81.The second-largest city in Bulgaria
- 82.Ford car model manufactured in Europe from 1968 to 2004
- 83.Giuseppe Verdi's penultimate opera, first performed at the Teatro alla Scala, Milan, in 1887
- 84.The second brightest star in Perseus
- 85.Song that earned Dolly Parton a Grammy Award 44 years after its original release
- 86.The fifth studio album by Dire Straits, released in 1985
- 87.The art of producing vocal sounds that appear to come from another source
- 88.An adult sexually-mature insect produced after metamorphosis
- 89.Brazilian footballer born Edson Arantes do Nascimento
- 90.Bookmakers' slang for odds of 3/1
- 91.German term for a building similar to a chteau, palace or manor house
- 92.Song written by Sonny West, Bill Tilghman and Norman Petty that was a 1958 hit for Buddy Holly
- 93.Middlesex town that was the birthplace of Glenn Hoddle
- 94.A machine in which paper or cloth is glazed or smoothed by passing between rollers
- 95.A government tax, for example on petrol, alcohol or imports
- 96.American TV serial drama created by Paul Scheuring, broadcast for four seasons from 2005 to 2009
- 97.Peer-to-peer ridesharing, food delivery and transportation network company founded by Garrett Camp and Travis Kalanick in 2009
- 98.Industrial port in central Japan, on Honshu, between Tokyo and Yokohama
- 99.The first book of the Old Testament
- 100.Tasmanian river also known as timtumili minanya
- 101.British sitcom that starred Ricky Gervais as Andy Millman
- 102.A unit of dry measure equal to eight quarts or one quarter of a bushel
- 103.Weightlifting movement in which the lifter moves the barbell from the floor to a racked position across the deltoids
- 104.English R&B and jazz musician born Clive Powell in 1943
- 105.English midfielder who had two spells at Newcastle United either side of spells at Sunderland and Fulham
- 106.1973 top ten hit single by Stealers Wheel
- 107.An organised body of professional applauders in French theatres and opera houses
- 108.A marine gastropod mollusc of the family Cypraeidae, with a glossy brightly-marked shell with an elongated opening
- 109.British jazz pianist and composer who married singer Julie Driscoll in 1970
- 110.Greenish-yellow liqueur made from a secret formula developed at a monastery at Fecamp in France in about 1510
- 111.Wrestling hold in which a wrestler wraps his legs round his opponent's body or head
- 112.Hebrew name for the Israeli city Acre
- 113.Port town and seaside resort in East Devon comprising the parishes of Littleham and Withycombe Raleigh
- 114.First name of the Roman emperor Constantine the Great
- 115.Belgian port with a ferry link to Ramsgate
- 116.Type of bramble named after the American botanist who developed it
- 117.Manchester-based pop group featuring lead singer Peter Noone
- 118.Measure of the weight of precious stones, now standardised as 0.20 grams
- 119.Ukrainian peninsula between the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov
- 120.Commune on the Garonne river in Bordeaux, which produces a sweet white wine
- 121.Title used to refer to a cardinal
- 122.Market town in Cumbria on the River Ehen
- 123.1972 top ten hit single by Alice Cooper
- 124.The world's best-selling album, released in 1982
- 125.Stoic philosopher who was the last emperor of the Pax Romana
- 126.Large wading bird with a long slender downward-curving beak
- 127.A type of mechanical piano also called a player piano
- 128.Finnish driver who won the 2007 Formula One World Drivers' Championship
- 129.The world's first purpose-built motor racing circuit
- 130.1978 American disaster film with Rock Hudson and Mia Farrow
- 131.Form of diatomaceous earth whose name means 'gravel yeast
- 132.Bolshevik revolutionary and Marxist theorist born Lev Davidovich Bronstein
- 133.São Paulo-based Brazilian football club founded in 1914 by Italian immigrants as Palestra Itália
- 134.Norwegian anthropologist best known for his Kon-Tiki expedition
- 135.Billy Joel hit single from his 1978 album 52nd Street
- 136.Country which won the Eurovision Song Contest in 1998 with Diva by Dana International
- 137.An indentation in the battlements of a building
- 138.Seaside town in North Somerset in which John Cleese was born
- 139.A plant that completes its life cycle in one year
- 140.Republic in Central America whose currency unit is the quetzal
- 141.American portrait painter who invented a code used in telegraphy
- 142.American city whose port is the busiest cruise ship passenger port in the world
- 143.American rock band fronted by Debbie Harry
- 144.2012 collection of essays by poet and nature writer Kathleen Jamie that was a Radio 4 Book of the Week
- 145.A hard, typically green, stone used for ornaments and jewellery
- 146.A small electric generator used to provide the spark in an internal-combustion engine
- 147.Mountain in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa that gives its name to a January 1900 battle in the Boer Wars
- 148.Raymond Chandler's second novel featuring Philip Marlowe
- 149.Small Greek island in the northwest Aegean Sea
- 150.The capital of Jordan