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This wisecracking title parrot of a 1998 movie has a traditional parrot name, but spelled with an "AU" & an "IE" |
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On "Downton Abbey", after Lady Mary tells Matthew his WWI wounds will paralyze him, she next offers him this beverage |
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The British board of trade defines the Harris type of this as a handwoven woolen fabric from the Hebrides |
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These 2 countries basically divide the bottom quarter of South America |
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To force open with a lever or bar |
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Arr! In this novel Long John Silver has a parrot called Cap'n Flint, named for a famous pirate |
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(I'm Andy Murray.) I was honored to be part of the first investiture conducted by Prince William; I received an OBE, which stands for this |
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200 pounds of mulberry leaves fed to worms can be used to produce one pound of this fabric |
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Of Dublin, Paris or Madrid, the capital city farthest west |
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Before "up", it's what a coach does to his team; before "out", to the other team |
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1925-1999: Singer who also co-wrote the Christmas tune heard here |
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Fred was the cockatoo of this Robert Blake TV detective |
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This London neighborhood lent its name to a group that included Virginia Woolf & friends |
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Cotton is a traditional fabric for this activity of making blankets into colorful art |
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In this maneuver, a spacecraft comes close enough to an object to make a detailed observation |
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Born 1926: "The Producers" producer |
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In a 1920 children's book, a parrot teaches this man how to talk to the furry & 4-footed |
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He commanded the British army during the Napoleonic Wars & was prime minister of England from 1828 to 1830 |
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This tall reed-like plant has long fibers, making it easy to spin into linen yarn |
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Golfe de Gascogne is what the French call this large bay of the Atlantic bordered by France & Spain |
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A clear, yellowish fluid containing white blood cells |
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1960-present: "Junior" NFL draft guru |
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Benedick calls Beatrice a "rare parrot" for the way she teases & mocks him in this Shakespeare play |
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Ozzy Osbourne has a Brummie accent because he was born in this second-largest English city |
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This sheer net fabric with hexagonal holes is named for a French city that began producing it in the early 1800s |
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An old song rhymes this capital city on the Mediterranean with "souvenirs" |
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Among imaginary creatures, a nymph lives in trees, while this, also a word for a slender woman, inhabits the air |
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