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    | This Macedonian General began his war against the Persian Empire by crossing the Hellespont in the spring of 334 B.C. | 
    Alexander the Great
 
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    | He's "nipping at your nose" in a Christmas song | 
    Jack Frost
 
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    | The Hippocratic Oath begins, "I swear by" this son of Zeus "the physician and Aesculapius..." | 
    Apollo
 
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    | The Shiba Inu originated in this country centuries ago but was only introduced into the U.S. after World War II | 
    Japan
 
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    | A verb or an adjective or a pronoun or an interjection | 
    a part of speech
 
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    | The Mayans gave this ancient Mexican city a name meaning "mouth of the wells of the Itza" | 
    Chichen Itza
 
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    | In a 1988 movie Bill Murray played Frank Cross, who's this Dickens character updated as a TV executive | 
    Ebenezer Scrooge
 
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    | You can still hear live music at this city's Club Grosse Freiheit, where the Beatles performed when they were mere larvae | 
    Hamburg
 
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    | From the Greek for "itch", it's a "heartbreaking" skin disease characterized by reddish patches | 
    psoriasis
 
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    | The American Kennel Club recognizes 2 breeds of pinscher: the Doberman & this "small" one | 
    Miniature
 
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    | Medium-sized game bird related to the pheasant | 
    (Brenna: What is a grouse?)
  a partridge
 
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    | This Greek was condemned to death in 399 B.C. for "impiety" & "corrupting the youth" | 
    Socrates
 
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    | In the New York City Ballet's 1954 "Nutcracker", Alberta Grant was Clara & Maria Tallchief, her | 
    the Sugar Plum Fairy
 
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    | The 1905 Nobel Prize for Medicine was awarded to Robert Koch for his discoveries in relation to this lung disease | 
    (Brenna: What is emphysema?)
  tuberculosis
 
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    | This dog was named for its ability to hunt birds called woodcock | 
    (Brenna: [About 6 seconds after Alex finishes reading the clue] What is [*]? (Alex: Yes, indeed!  I love to watch contestants work it out, figure it out, let the brain go, the wheels turn, then, "What's [*]?"--of course!)
  the cocker spaniel
 
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    | Resistance fighters | 
    partisans
 
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    | Nebuchadnezzar's many building projects included the repair of this type of stepped tower devoted to the god Marduk | 
    a ziggurat
 
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    | Character name of Edmund Gwenn & Richard Attenborough in versions of "Miracle on 34th Street" | 
    Kris Kringle
 
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    | At Hohenschwangau Castle, you'll find a body of water that shares its name with this 1877 ballet | 
    Swan Lake
 
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    | In 1785 Dr. William Withering documented the first medicinal use of this plant from which digitalis is derived | 
    foxglove
 
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    | The name of this small dog sounds like a Belgian relative of "Jeopardy!" creator Merv | 
    (Brenna: What is the Griffon?)  (Alex: Be more specific.) (Brenna: What is the...) (Alex: Say something.) [The time expiry signal sounds.]
  the Brussels griffon
 
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    | The division of a country into 2 or more separate countries | 
    a partition
 
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    | This ancient wonder was built around 353 B.C. as a tomb for a provincial ruler of the Persian Empire | 
    the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus
 
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    | In a Victor Herbert operetta, children Alan & Jane see a spectacular pageant in this place | 
    (Micah: Don't know.)
  Toyland
 
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    | This Baylor physician who pioneered coronary bypass techniques was the first to repair an aneurysm | 
    (Robert: Who is Jarvik?)
  Michael DeBakey
 
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    | The Dandie Dinmont terrier was named for a farmer in this man's novel "Guy Mannering" | 
    Sir Walter Scott
 
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    | Reproduction without fertilization | 
    parthenogenesis
 
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