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  | YOUNG PEOPLE'S LITERATURE |  
   
 
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    | "High-ranking" name of the Confederate locomotive hijacked by Union troops in 1862 | 
    the General
 
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    | One of the highest systems using these alliterative transports takes you from Chamonix up 8,900' almost to the summit of Mount Midi | 
    a cable car
 
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    | The name of this quirky alliterative character was inspired by a boomerang toy Roald Dahl had as a boy | 
    (Buzzy: Yeah, the toy was called Silly Wonka. Who knew?)
  Willy Wonka
 
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    | The Jaguar I-PACE & the Fiat 500e are both examples of these, ZEVs for short | 
    zero emission vehicles
 
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    Goal,  swimsuit | 
    water polo
 
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    | There's a silent "B" in this adjective meaning mysterious & faint, like the Mona Lisa's smile | 
    subtle
 
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    | The Dictator, an enormous one of these artillery weapons that fire high-arcing shells, was used in the Siege of Petersburg | 
    (Nibir: What is a cannon?) (Buzzy: More specific.) (Nibir: Uh, what is a... no.)
  a mortar
 
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    | First built in 1936, Oscar Mayer's distinctive promotional vehicle has this appropriate name | 
    the Wienermobile
 
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    | Chapters in this work include "The Mock Turtle's Story" & "The Lobster Quadrille" | 
    Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
 
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    | This base-2 notation system uses only 2 digits, one & zero | 
    binary
 
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    | This optical device that uses mirrors & colored glass gets its name partly from the Greek for "beautiful" | 
    kaleidoscope
 
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    | At Gettysburg James Longstreet was actually in command of the disastrous Confederate attack known as this | 
    Pickett's Charge
 
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    | This 1,900-mile-long interstate travels by Jacksonville, Florida, Washington, D.C. & Portland, Maine | 
    I-95
 
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    | "Last Sacrifice" was the finale of Richelle Mead's series about special young people attending this school | 
    (Nibir: What is the Umbrella Academy?)
  the Vampire Academy
 
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    | 0 K, not to be confused with OK, is also known by this phrase | 
    (Jason: What is 0 kelvin?) (Buzzy: More specific?) (Jason: Degrees, kelvin, temperature?)
  absolute zero
 
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    Hoops,  ribbons | 
    (Jason: What is gymnastics?) (Buzzy: More specific?)
  rhythmic gymnastics
 
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    | This portmanteau word for a women's 2-piece bathing suit that provides more coverage than a bikini dates to 1985 | 
    a tankini
 
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    | After this bloody 1862 battle, President Lincoln visited McClellan on the battlefield & urged him to pursue retreating rebels | 
    Antietam
 
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    | In 1871 this railroad & shipping tycoon built the first depot at what became Grand Central Terminal | 
    (Cornelius) Vanderbilt
 
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    | In a story by Mary Mapes Dodge, the sister of this title boy wins the silver skates | 
    Hans Brinker
 
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    | The bran cereal called this "One" says it provides 65% of your daily value of it | 
    Fiber One
 
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    | Bindings & a tube with 22-foot-high walls | 
    (Jason: What is skateboarding?)
  snowboarding
 
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    | Tilt, prejudice & diagonal are synonyms of this 4-letter word | 
    bias
 
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    | U.S. Grant got his "Unconditional Surrender" nickname at the 1862 capture of Fort Donelson on the Cumberland River in this state | 
    Tennessee
 
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    | Named for its three tiers of oars, it was the principal warship with which the Greek city-states vied for control of the seas | 
    the trireme
 
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    | Melinda Sordino is the heroine of this novel by Laurie Halse Anderson; the last name Sordino can mean "mute" | 
    Speak
 
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    | ZIRP is short for this banking "policy" that encourages low-cost credit to companies & individuals | 
    zero interest-rate policy
 
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    Horse,  epee | 
    (Jennifer: What is fencing?)
  modern pentathlon
 
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    | Geometry has cool words like rhombus & this one for a quadrilateral with only 2 parallel sides | 
    a trapezoid
 
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