Category: The Independents Jumbo General Crossword Answers
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- 1.Violinist, born in Tel Aviv in 1945, who made his debut at Carnegie Hall in 1963
- 2.Drag persona of singer and actor Harris Glenn Milstead
- 3.English singer-songwriter whose groups include Blur and Gorillaz
- 4.The primordial god of sexual love and beauty in Greek mythology
- 5.Portuguese football manager who won the inaugural Uefa Conference League with Roma
- 6.1959 book by Laurie Lee
- 7.Anglo-Saxon noblewoman who, according to legend, rode naked through the streets of Coventry
- 8.Actress who married singer Frank Sinatra in 1966
- 9.A herbal infusion made from anything other than the leaves of the tea bush
- 10.Song by George Gershwin and Irving Caesar associated with singer Al Jolson
- 11.1962 dystopian novel by Anthony Burgess
- 12.Place of worship for Zoroastrians
- 13.A very light narrow racing boat
- 14.Sea connecting the Atlantic and Arctic oceans
- 15.1959 film based on a novel of the same name by Daphne du Maurier, starring Alec Guinness and Bette Davis
- 16.Breed of horse mainly used for riding
- 17.Actress whose film career spanned 75 years, from 1912 to 1987
- 18.In Jewish folklore, Adam's first wife
- 19.Singer whose backing band was The Blockheads
- 20.Japanese martial art developed by Morihei Ueshiba
- 21.Form of regional anaesthesia often used in childbirth
- 22.1942 Oscar-winning film based on a series of newspaper columns by Jan Struther
- 23.Italian multinational manufacturer and distributor of electricity and gas, first established as a public body in 1963
- 24.Leader of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
- 25.Greek island in the northern Aegean Sea whose highest point is Mount Fengari
- 26.Former name of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- 27.Resort on the French Riviera, close to the Italian border, nicknamed "la perle de la France"
- 28.Patriotic song written by George M Cohan during World War I
- 29.A small piece of metal suspended within a bell that causes it to sound when made to strike against its side
- 30.Romanian professional tennis player who was World Number 1 between August 1973 and June 1974
- 31.The female of the ruff
- 32.The tenth novel by Hermann Hesse
- 33.Caribbean island nation whose capital is Kingston
- 34.Son of Noah and the father of Cush, Mizraim, Phut and Canaan
- 35.The birthplace of Robert Burns
- 36.1983 album by U2
- 37.Former world middleweight and super middleweight boxing champion known as "The Dark Destroyer"
- 38.Political exclave in Europe that existed between 1949 and 1990
- 39.The second wife of King Henry VIII
- 40.Genus of spring ephemeral perennials, native to temperate regions of North America and Asia
- 41.A picture or sculpture of Christ crowned with thorns
- 42.Of music, having no established key
- 43.Scottish physician and writer who created Sherlock Holmes
- 44.US state whose capital is Des Moines
- 45.Figure skating jump named after the Austrian skater who first performed it in 1913
- 46.American tennis player who won 31 Grand Slam tournament titles during her career, including eight singles titles at Wimbledon
- 47.In South Africa, a camp, especially one defended by a circular formation of wagons
- 48.Guitarist who joined The Bay City Rollers in 1972
- 49.1995 Walt Disney film based on the life of a Powhatan woman
- 50.Whiskey distilled from a mash of corn, malt and rye, aged in charred oak barrels
- 51.Independent agency of the executive branch of the US government responsible for the civilian space programme
- 52.The philosophical study of the moral value of human conduct
- 53.The sum of the first four twin prime pairs
- 54.1983 Stephen Sondheim musical inspired by a painting by Georges Seurat
- 55.Fishing village on the Atlantic Coast of north Cornwall that is home to the sea-shanty singing group Fisherman's Friends
- 56.Species of turtle native to the eastern and southern United States belonging to the monotypic genus Malaclemys
- 57.Lotus sports car built in the UK between 1976 and 2004
- 58.The west wind
- 59.Indonesian island whose capital is Denpasar
- 60.The personification of luck in Roman religion, equivalent to the Greek goddess Tyche
- 61.1936 novel by Daphne du Maurier set around a pub in the middle of Bodmin Moor
- 62.Former parliamentary constituency whose MPs included the writer Hilaire Belloc
- 63.Saint best known for his translation of the Bible into Latin (the Vulgate)
- 64.1952 children's novel by E B White about a pig named Wilbur
- 65.Process in which ice sheets are created
- 66.Star-studded 2006 film based on a 1997 George Plimpton book about Truman Capote
- 67.A pale flame or phosphorescence also called friar's lantern, ignis fatuus and jack-o'-lantern
- 68.Condition in which the sufferer responds to visual stimuli without consciously perceiving them
- 69.Nickname of Sir Henry Percy
- 70.Zimbabwean tennis player who won the men's doubles at the 1994 French Open partnering Jonathan Stark
- 71.The most northerly of the Channel Islands
- 72.German leader of the Protestant Reformation excommunicated and outlawed by the Diet of Worms in 1521
- 73.Building in Berlin in which assembly of the Weimar Republic met until its destruction by fire in 1933
- 74.Island of Indonesia whose capital is Jakarta
- 75.Musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice about the second wife of Juan Perón
- 76.In Greek mythology, the fluid said to flow in the veins of the gods
- 77.Horse that won the 1968 Grand National
- 78.Isle of Wight seaside resort that boasts the world's oldest seaside pleasure pier
- 79.Song that gave Marie Osmond a top ten hit in both the US and the UK in 1973
- 80.British girl group comprising Keisha Buchanan, Mutya Buena and Siobhán Donaghy
- 81.1986 album by The The
- 82.Essex-based London airport whose terminal building was designed by Foster Associates
- 83.___ Twine, incompetent conjuror who was one of Les Dawson's characters
- 84.A bitter crystalline alkaloid extracted from cinchona bark, the salts of which are used in malaria therapy
- 85.2000 film starring Brenda Blethyn and Craig Ferguson
- 86.American actress who became Princess consort of Monaco in 1956
- 87.Saracens assistant coach who won 64 caps for the Scotland (14 as skipper)
- 88.Large open space on the border of Berkshire and Surrey that is home to the Scout camp WINGS every five years
- 89.Superior, Huron, Erie, Ontario and Michigan, collectively
- 90.Dorset village noted for its priapic chalk Giant
- 91.Swiss painter and etcher who was a founder member of der Blaue Reiter
- 92.A lightly spiced cured bacon from Italy whose name literally means "little belly"
- 93.Nickname of Australian jockey Arthur Edward Breasley
- 94.American boxer who in 2011 became the oldest man to win a world title
- 95.Sultanate in NW Borneo whose capital is Bandar Seri Begawan
- 96.Horse that won the 1952 Derby
- 97.1985 French film directed by Luc Besson, starring Isabelle Adjani and Christopher Lambert
- 98.Cooking term meaning covered with browned breadcrumbs and/or cheese
- 99.America's "City of Brotherly Love"
- 100.Member of a group of outlaw cowboys whose brother Billy was killed in the Gunfight at the OK Corral
- 101.Scientist who studies individual celestial bodies and the universe as a whole
- 102.The first pilot confirmed to have exceeded the speed of sound in level flight
- 103.Brittle form of plastic made from formaldehyde and phenol, developed in New York in 1907
- 104.American singer and songwriter who was Bobby Hatfield's partner in The Righteous Brothers
- 105.River on which Florence, Empoli and Pisa stand
- 106.Daniel ___, Irish politician known as "The Liberator"
- 107.The biggest municipality in southern Iceland
- 108.1974 Top 10 hit written and performed by Billy Swan
- 109.Historical county occupying almost a quarter of the total area of Northern Ireland
- 110.A small ape of the genus Hylobates inhabiting forests in S Asia
- 111.The site of St Paul's Cathedral in London
- 112.Large genus of approximately 150 species of broadleaf evergreens in the family Malvaceae that includes the flowering maple
- 113.Brightest star in the constellation Cygnus
- 114.In many parts of South Asia, a series of steps leading down to a river
- 115.The second eldest of the Gorgons in Greek mythology
- 116.Mexican tortilla that is toasted or deep fried
- 117.Unit of weight of silk, rayon or nylon thread, usually used as a measure of the fineness of stockings or tights
- 118.Brazilian-born former Arsenal footballer who made his debut for Croatia in 2004
- 119.Gadoid food fish of the genus Merluccius
- 120.Another name for potassium carbonate
- 121.Visual guessing game usually played in families with young children
- 122.Jukebox musical based on the songs of Take That
- 123.Style of jazz associated with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie
- 124.A Spanish sparkling wine similar to champagne
- 125.An obsolete form of the lute with two necks
- 126.Formal or literary word for swimming
- 127.Series of four vampire-themed novels by Stephenie Meyer
- 128.Former Liverpool and Israel defender killed in a motorcycle crash in 2010
- 129.A German prisoner-of-war camp in World War II
- 130.A ship, lorry or other form of transport designed to carry refrigerated cargo
- 131."___ Homo", phrase uttered by Pontius Pilate that is Latin for "Behold the Man"
- 132.The county town of County Kildare in the Republic of Ireland
- 133.American soul singer shot dead by the manager of the Hacienda Motel in Los Angeles in 1964
- 134.Another name for a polygraph
- 135.Title of the second album by The Nice, from an aphorism attributed to Hippocrates
- 136.The second son of Adam and Eve
- 137.Popular Isle of Wight seaside resort on Sandown Bay
- 138.Italian town that was a major Mediterranean port from the 10th to the 18th century
- 139.A mountain range in Victoria also known by the name Gariwerd
- 140.Fear of the number 13
- 141.The third largest city in the Canton of Zürich
- 142.Either of two points lying at the extremities of an eccentric orbit of a planet, satellite, etc.
- 143.Poem written by Wilfred Owen in 1917 and published posthumously in 1920
- 144.French poet, journalist, and novelist who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1921
- 145.1952 Howard Hawks western starring Kirk Douglas, Arthur Hunnicutt and Dewey Martin
- 146.Traditional herbal liqueur similar to absinthe from the Savoy region of Europe
- 147.The fourth studio album by Pearl Jam, released in 1996
- 148.Projectile containing a number of small pellets or bullets exploded before impact, named after the English army officer who invented it
- 149.Communications code word for the letter P
- 150.Novella by Ernest Hemingway written in Cuba in 1951 and published in 1952