Category: The Independents Jumbo General Crossword Answers
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The Independents Jumbo General Crossword Answers -13-April-2024
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  1. 1.A creamy pale pink pate from Greece, made from the roe of grey mullet or smoked cod
  2. 2.The only member to feature on every Pink Floyd album
  3. 3.Dudley Moore's counterpart of Peter Cook's Clive
  4. 4.The forward upper part of the skull
  5. 5.Commercial and industrial city in northwestern Germany with a major port on the River Weser
  6. 6.The fiancée and muse to English Romantic poet John Keats
  7. 7.The capital of Japan
  8. 8.American film actress, born Constance Ockelman, noted for her femme fatale roles in films noirs with Alan Ladd
  9. 9.Port that is capital of the Marche region of Italy
  10. 10.The vocal apparatus of the larynx, consisting of the two true vocal cords and the opening between them
  11. 11.North Wales market town with a 13th-century castle
  12. 12.Rotterdam-based Dutch football club who won the European Cup in 1969-70
  13. 13.A person who carries or escorts the coffin at a funeral
  14. 14.British comedian and radio/TV entertainer born Maurice Cole in 1944
  15. 15.Room from which the US President makes significant addresses to the nation
  16. 16.Corner square of a standard Monopoly board
  17. 17.Jean-Baptiste ___, canonised French priest proclaimed by Pope Pius XII as patron saint of all teachers of youth in 1950
  18. 18.British diplomat hanged by the British for treason in 1916
  19. 19.The standard currency unit of Myanmar
  20. 20.ITV comedy panel game show that was hosted by Barry Cryer
  21. 21.The periwinkle genus of plants
  22. 22.Any of several North American plants of the genus Apocynum thought to be poisonous to canines
  23. 23.Infectious disease caused by the release of toxins from a bacterium, the spores of which are found in soil
  24. 24.Strong white metallic element whose atomic number is 22
  25. 25.Conservative prime minister of the UK from 1902 to 1905
  26. 26.British learning disability charity founded by Judy Fryd in 1946
  27. 27.Horse that won the 1953 Derby
  28. 28.1927 Aldwych farce by Ben Travers
  29. 29.An extinct language of ancient S Italy belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European family
  30. 30.Polish city on the Warta River
  31. 31.2008 top ten hit by Danish pop group Alphabeat
  32. 32.The right to vote
  33. 33.City in Russia, on the delta of the Volga River, 21m below sea level
  34. 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. 35.Brand of hot sauce produced by the McIlhenny Company of Avery Island, Louisiana
  36. 36.Platform built parallel to the waterfront at a harbour for the docking, loading and unloading of ships
  37. 37.Island in the Firth of Clyde whose chief town is Rothesay
  38. 38.In Greek mythology, a gorgon beheaded by Perseus
  39. 39.Canadian supermodel who claimed "We don't wake up for less than $10,000 a day"
  40. 40.Showman who toured Europe and the US with his Wild West Show
  41. 41.The third studio album by Iron Maiden, released in 1982
  42. 42.Influential poem by Maya Angelou, first published in 1978
  43. 43.Kingdom of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy associated with King Offa and Lady Godiva
  44. 44.Coarse-grained igneous rock widely used for building
  45. 45.Marx Brother born with the first name Adolph
  46. 46.The most important prophet in Judaism
  47. 47.Welsh football club that played at the Vetch Field between 1912 and 2005
  48. 48.A religious decree issued by a Muslim leader
  49. 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. 50.Country whose capital is Katmandu
  51. 51.Solar god of Egyptian mythology usually depicted with a falcon's head
  52. 52.A valved brass instrument normally pitched in B flat
  53. 53.Assumed name of US surrealist photographer Emmanuel Rudnitsky
  54. 54.American jazz pianist and bandleader whose bands included his Cherry Blossoms and his Barons of Rhythm
  55. 55.1960s BBC children's TV series narrated by Oliver Postgate
  56. 56.American R&B singer-songwriter and actress awarded a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2016
  57. 57.Shakespearean character who delivers the line "Out, damned spot!"
  58. 58.Rugby league club that beat St Helens in the 2019 Challenge Cup Final
  59. 59.Latin name for the onion genus
  60. 60.Welsh county whose administrative centre is Haverfordwest
  61. 61.Mild analgesic drug known as acetaminophen in the US
  62. 62.1971 hit single for Derek and the Dominos
  63. 63.Country whose capital is Lima
  64. 64.Derbyshire and England batsman who was one of the five Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1989
  65. 65.North Somerset town in which former cricketer and umpire Mervyn Kitchen was born
  66. 66.Dutch football club from Arnhem founded in 1892
  67. 67.In psychology, the mental process used in thinking and perceiving
  68. 68.The second largest city in Moldova
  69. 69.Indigenous people of the Northeastern Woodlands who live in the US and Canada
  70. 70.Radioactive element discovered in 1952
  71. 71.In Greek mythology, an enchantress who detained Odysseus on her island and turned his men into swine
  72. 72.The derived SI unit of power
  73. 73.American singer, actor and politician who found fame in partnership with his wife Cher
  74. 74.Lancashire town in the Forest of Rossendale
  75. 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. 76.Low dam built across a river to raise its level or control its flow
  77. 77.City in Ohio nicknamed "Rubber Capital of the World"
  78. 78.A large bath used for hydrotherapy, relaxation or pleasure, usually located outdoors
  79. 79.English nursery rhyme character who "sat on a tuffet"
  80. 80.Biblical city which, along with Sodom, was destroyed by God for the depravity of its inhabitants
  81. 81.The second-largest city in Bulgaria
  82. 82.Ford car model manufactured in Europe from 1968 to 2004
  83. 83.Giuseppe Verdi's penultimate opera, first performed at the Teatro alla Scala, Milan, in 1887
  84. 84.The second brightest star in Perseus
  85. 85.Song that earned Dolly Parton a Grammy Award 44 years after its original release
  86. 86.The fifth studio album by Dire Straits, released in 1985
  87. 87.The art of producing vocal sounds that appear to come from another source
  88. 88.An adult sexually-mature insect produced after metamorphosis
  89. 89.Brazilian footballer born Edson Arantes do Nascimento
  90. 90.Bookmakers' slang for odds of 3/1
  91. 91.German term for a building similar to a chteau, palace or manor house
  92. 92.Song written by Sonny West, Bill Tilghman and Norman Petty that was a 1958 hit for Buddy Holly
  93. 93.Middlesex town that was the birthplace of Glenn Hoddle
  94. 94.A machine in which paper or cloth is glazed or smoothed by passing between rollers
  95. 95.A government tax, for example on petrol, alcohol or imports
  96. 96.American TV serial drama created by Paul Scheuring, broadcast for four seasons from 2005 to 2009
  97. 97.Peer-to-peer ridesharing, food delivery and transportation network company founded by Garrett Camp and Travis Kalanick in 2009
  98. 98.Industrial port in central Japan, on Honshu, between Tokyo and Yokohama
  99. 99.The first book of the Old Testament
  100. 100.Tasmanian river also known as timtumili minanya
  101. 101.British sitcom that starred Ricky Gervais as Andy Millman
  102. 102.A unit of dry measure equal to eight quarts or one quarter of a bushel
  103. 103.Weightlifting movement in which the lifter moves the barbell from the floor to a racked position across the deltoids
  104. 104.English R&B and jazz musician born Clive Powell in 1943
  105. 105.English midfielder who had two spells at Newcastle United either side of spells at Sunderland and Fulham
  106. 106.1973 top ten hit single by Stealers Wheel
  107. 107.An organised body of professional applauders in French theatres and opera houses
  108. 108.A marine gastropod mollusc of the family Cypraeidae, with a glossy brightly-marked shell with an elongated opening
  109. 109.British jazz pianist and composer who married singer Julie Driscoll in 1970
  110. 110.Greenish-yellow liqueur made from a secret formula developed at a monastery at Fecamp in France in about 1510
  111. 111.Wrestling hold in which a wrestler wraps his legs round his opponent's body or head
  112. 112.Hebrew name for the Israeli city Acre
  113. 113.Port town and seaside resort in East Devon comprising the parishes of Littleham and Withycombe Raleigh
  114. 114.First name of the Roman emperor Constantine the Great
  115. 115.Belgian port with a ferry link to Ramsgate
  116. 116.Type of bramble named after the American botanist who developed it
  117. 117.Manchester-based pop group featuring lead singer Peter Noone
  118. 118.Measure of the weight of precious stones, now standardised as 0.20 grams
  119. 119.Ukrainian peninsula between the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov
  120. 120.Commune on the Garonne river in Bordeaux, which produces a sweet white wine
  121. 121.Title used to refer to a cardinal
  122. 122.Market town in Cumbria on the River Ehen
  123. 123.1972 top ten hit single by Alice Cooper
  124. 124.The world's best-selling album, released in 1982
  125. 125.Stoic philosopher who was the last emperor of the Pax Romana
  126. 126.Large wading bird with a long slender downward-curving beak
  127. 127.A type of mechanical piano also called a player piano
  128. 128.Finnish driver who won the 2007 Formula One World Drivers' Championship
  129. 129.The world's first purpose-built motor racing circuit
  130. 130.1978 American disaster film with Rock Hudson and Mia Farrow
  131. 131.Form of diatomaceous earth whose name means 'gravel yeast
  132. 132.Bolshevik revolutionary and Marxist theorist born Lev Davidovich Bronstein
  133. 133.São Paulo-based Brazilian football club founded in 1914 by Italian immigrants as Palestra Itália
  134. 134.Norwegian anthropologist best known for his Kon-Tiki expedition
  135. 135.Billy Joel hit single from his 1978 album 52nd Street
  136. 136.Country which won the Eurovision Song Contest in 1998 with Diva by Dana International
  137. 137.An indentation in the battlements of a building
  138. 138.Seaside town in North Somerset in which John Cleese was born
  139. 139.A plant that completes its life cycle in one year
  140. 140.Republic in Central America whose currency unit is the quetzal
  141. 141.American portrait painter who invented a code used in telegraphy
  142. 142.American city whose port is the busiest cruise ship passenger port in the world
  143. 143.American rock band fronted by Debbie Harry
  144. 144.2012 collection of essays by poet and nature writer Kathleen Jamie that was a Radio 4 Book of the Week
  145. 145.A hard, typically green, stone used for ornaments and jewellery
  146. 146.A small electric generator used to provide the spark in an internal-combustion engine
  147. 147.Mountain in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa that gives its name to a January 1900 battle in the Boer Wars
  148. 148.Raymond Chandler's second novel featuring Philip Marlowe
  149. 149.Small Greek island in the northwest Aegean Sea
  150. 150.The capital of Jordan

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