| HISTORIC ENGLISH COUNTIES |  
   
 
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    | Found in the north, this largest historic county is known for more than just its savory pudding | 
    Yorkshire
 
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    | To a Brit a mackintosh isn't an apple or a computer, it's this article of clothing | 
    a raincoat
 
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    Dorothy, Aunt Em | 
    The Wizard of Oz
 
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    | Developed by Bjarne Stroustrup, this letter "++" is one of the first computer languages that college students learn | 
    (Kendra: What is BASIC?)
  C
 
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    | Black pudding isn't a type of dessert--it's a type of this | 
    sausage
 
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    | (Ken Jennings presents the clue.) The greatest minds of all time include Einstein, of course, Isaac Newton, & this woman, a student of mathematics, physics & chemistry, & also the first to win a Nobel Prize | 
    Marie Curie
 
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    | Fittingly, most of this county's southern border is with Suffolk | 
    Norfolk
 
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    | The name of this bodysuit that combines a leotard with tights comes from the word "leotard" | 
    unitard
 
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    Stephen Dedalus, Molly Bloom | 
    Ulysses
 
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    | Seen here is the logo for this language that’s used on billions of devices everywhere | 
    Java
 
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    | Someone vigorously fighting for a cause, not just in the medieval Middle East | 
    a crusader
 
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    | (Ken Jennings presents the clue.) 1967 saw the Summer of Love & the release of what “Rolling Stone” calls the greatest album of all time, this Beatles classic that Paul McCartney conceived of as being by an alter ego group | 
    Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
 
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    | What is now this city in Somerset was started by the Romans as Aquae Sulis around its hot springs | 
    Bath
 
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    | Puffer or quilted vests are also known as these vests, for the natural insulation used in them | 
    (Kristen: What is fleece?)
  down
 
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    John Yossarian & Milo Minderbinder | 
    (Kristen: [Exhales deeply] What is... the Bible?) [Laughter]
  Catch-22
 
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    | In the acronym for this computer language created at Dartmouth in the 1960s, the first letter stands for "Beginner's" | 
    BASIC
 
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    | Named for a composer of military marches, this instrument is made for marching | 
    a sousaphone
 
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    | (Ken Jennings presents the clue.)  This writer once said his first book wasn’t an important novel, but it ranks among the great ones, & its line, “I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me” is among the most haunting of the 20th century | 
    Ralph Ellison
 
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    | Of course Sherwood is found in this "shire" where Elizabeth Fradd is the current high sheriff | 
    Nottinghamshire
 
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    | This headwear of the Middle Ages has a name that sounds like an adult who accompanies two young people on a date | 
    a chaperon
 
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    Ponyboy Curtis, Johnny Cade, Cherry Valance | 
    The Outsiders
 
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    | Created by Tim Berners-Lee, the language known by these 4 letters is used to create lots of web pages | 
    (Jason: What is HTTP?)
  HTML
 
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    | The free-swimming stage in a jellyfish's life, it sounds like a mythological monster | 
    medusa
 
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    | (Ken Jennings presents the clue.)  Among the greatest archaeological discoveries are King Tut’s tomb, & more recently, the remains of this last Plantagenet king of England; his skeleton, uncovered in a Leicester parking lot, of all places, showed signs of a fatal battle wound & scoliosis | 
    Richard III
 
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    | The name of this region in southwest England is related to the Latin word for “horn”, based on its horn-like shape | 
    Cornwall
 
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    | The raglan variety of this clothing part is named for a British general who lost a limb at Waterloo & had a special shirt made | 
    sleeve
 
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    Lucie Manette, Madame Defarge | 
    [NOTE: Kristen had "The" as the leading article.]
  A Tale of Two Cities
 
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    | Sharing a name with a type of large snake, this computer language is used in NASA's integrated planning system | 
    Python
 
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    | Adjective for a behavior or transgression that is so bad it cannot be pardoned or tolerated | 
    inexcusable
 
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    | (Ken Jennings presents the clue.)  Even with his 1997 loss to Deep Blue, an IBM computer (I know how that feels), this Soviet-born chess master ranks as probably the greatest player of all time--though for my money, his Sicilian defense got a bit predictable | 
    Kasparov
 
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