Jeopardy! Round, Double Jeopardy! Round, or Tiebreaker Round clues (80 results returned)
#7309, aired 2016-05-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: What could be more fun than "a barrel of" these monkeys |
#7309, aired 2016-05-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: Here's this phrase, literally a bull in a china shop |
#7309, aired 2016-05-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1200: To achieve dual goals with a single effort is to do this, perhaps with a pebble--ready, aim, throw! kill two birds with one stone |
#7309, aired 2016-05-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1600: It means as penniless as a rodent at a Christian house of worship poor as a church mouse |
#7309, aired 2016-05-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $2000: TV & movie Westerns are popularly called these, even if they aren't musical horse operas |
#6552, aired 2013-02-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: "Happy as a ____ at high tide" clam |
#6552, aired 2013-02-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: "Like water off a ____'s back" duck |
#6552, aired 2013-02-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: "Poor as a church ____" mouse |
#6552, aired 2013-02-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: "Run with the hare & hunt with the ____s" hounds |
#6552, aired 2013-02-26 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: "Cast pearls before ____" swine |
#6283, aired 2012-01-04 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: "The straw that broke" this creature's "back" the camel |
#6283, aired 2012-01-04 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: "A fine kettle of" these fish |
#6283, aired 2012-01-04 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: "Mad as a wet" this bird a hen |
#6283, aired 2012-01-04 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: "A" this "of a different color" a horse |
#6283, aired 2012-01-04 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: "Killing the fatted" one a calf |
#5893, aired 2010-04-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: You don't have to be at the beach to be "happy as" one of these "at high tide" a clam |
#5893, aired 2010-04-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: If you have the biggest or best part of something, you have this animal's "share" the lion's share |
#5893, aired 2010-04-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: A proverb says, "You can't make a silk purse out of" this a sow's ear |
#5893, aired 2010-04-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1,000 (Daily Double): This term for the most sultry part of summer come from the Latin "dies caniculares" the dog days |
#5893, aired 2010-04-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: Evoking images of jumping reptiles, it's one of little orphan Annie's favorite interjections "Leapin' lizards" |
#5752, aired 2009-09-22 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: "To play" this marsupial means to feign death or ignorance possum |
#5752, aired 2009-09-22 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: To have this insect's waist means to have a slender waistline wasp |
#5752, aired 2009-09-22 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: "Two shakes of" this means to move remarkably fast a lamb's tail |
#5752, aired 2009-09-22 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: This exclamation that means "nonsense" is a 1932 Marx Brothers title horse feathers |
#5752, aired 2009-09-22 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from the deck of the USS John C. Stennis.) An observation area for the flight deck is grimly called this bird's row; crashes are less common now than when it got the name a vulture |
#5505, aired 2008-07-11 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: It's a canine cure for a hangover hair of the dog that bit you |
#5505, aired 2008-07-11 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: We need to have an open & honest conversation so "let's talk" this bird turkey |
#5505, aired 2008-07-11 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: Beastly "bounce" in stock prices that's a brief & insignificant recovery after a steep decline a dead cat bounce |
#5505, aired 2008-07-11 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: It's any crudely operated tribunal that makes a fair trial impossible a kangaroo court |
#5505, aired 2008-07-11 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: It's the type of fixture seen here a gooseneck lamp |
#5426, aired 2008-03-24 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: "To cry" these is to show insincere sorrow crocodile tears |
#5426, aired 2008-03-24 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: To look guilty but smug is "to look like" this, an expression that mentions 2 pets the cat that ate the canary |
#5426, aired 2008-03-24 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1200: This porcine phrase refers to something of undetermined value, as a purchase a pig in a poke |
#5426, aired 2008-03-24 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1600: (Sarah of the Clue Crew monkeys around at Helping Hands: Monkey Helpers for the Disabled in Boston.) The animals learn to help by imitating; this idiom, "MSMD", describes their training monkey see, monkey do |
#5426, aired 2008-03-24 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $2000: On "Cheers", Norm said it was this kind of world & "I'm wearing Milk-Bone underwear" dog-eat-dog |
#5389, aired 2008-01-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: An ambitious person is often described as an "eager" one of these an eager beaver |
#5389, aired 2008-01-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: If you're a little eccentric, you likely have one of these in your "bonnet" a bee |
#5389, aired 2008-01-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: In the familiar proverb, it's when "the mice will play" when the cat's away |
#5389, aired 2008-01-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: When it comes to a crisis, you shouldn't do this "in midstream" change horses |
#5389, aired 2008-01-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: Don't be afraid to meet a problem head on; just do this, like a matador take the bull by the horns |
#5092, aired 2006-10-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: It precedes "after while, crocodile" see you later, alligator |
#5092, aired 2006-10-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: This term for an innocent person who takes the blame for others comes to us from Leviticus a scapegoat |
#5092, aired 2006-10-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1200: Ballplayers have used this 2-word phrase for a cramp or stiffness in an arm or leg muscle since the 1880s charley horse |
#5092, aired 2006-10-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1600: (Sarah of the Clue Crew presents from Savannah, GA.) After meeting with black leaders here in Savannah, General Sherman issued an order giving land to black farmers, the likely origin of the promise "40 acres and" this a mule |
#5092, aired 2006-10-31 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $2000: In good spirits? Then you're probably this 4-word phrase "at high tide" happy as a clam |
#4477, aired 2004-02-10 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: When it's really pouring down, it's "raining" these 2 animals cats and dogs |
#4477, aired 2004-02-10 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: To act frenzied is to behave like one of these farm residents "with its head cut off" a chicken |
#4477, aired 2004-02-10 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: A possession that is hard to get rid of is called a "white" one of these an elephant |
#4477, aired 2004-02-10 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: One of these fish indicates a misleading or false trail a red herring |
#4477, aired 2004-02-10 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: This term for an informant comes from a decoy once set out by bird hunters a stool pigeon |
#4147, aired 2002-09-17 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: If you can barely speak, you're said to have one of these amphibians "in your throat" a frog |
#4147, aired 2002-09-17 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: An easy target is a "sitting" one of these animals duck |
#4147, aired 2002-09-17 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: The one thing that brings everything tumbling down is "the straw that" did this broke the camel's back |
#4147, aired 2002-09-17 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: Someone who looks impressive or powerful but is in fact neither is said to be a "paper" one of these animals tiger |
#4147, aired 2002-09-17 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: An artist's last great work is often described as this bird's "song" swan |
#3805, aired 2001-03-02 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: When you obtain information first hand, you get it "straight from" this animal's mouth Horse |
#3805, aired 2001-03-02 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: A useful tool, it's also what you "throw" when you disrupt or sabotage something Monkey wrench |
#3805, aired 2001-03-02 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: If you have one of these seabirds "around your neck", you have a big problem Albatross |
#3805, aired 2001-03-02 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: This 2-word term meaning the best or largest portion of something comes from one of Aesop's Fables Lion's share |
#3805, aired 2001-03-02 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: A type of polecat gave rise to this expression meaning to search for or seek out, like "the truth" Ferret out |
#3325, aired 1999-02-05 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: It's the term for a town so small & unexciting it has but a single equine One-horse town |
#3325, aired 1999-02-05 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: In this weather phrase, felines represent precipitation & canines symbolize wind & storm Raining cats & dogs |
#3325, aired 1999-02-05 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: In other words, it's a grizzly embrace Bear hug |
#3325, aired 1999-02-05 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: If you expose yourself to great danger, you're "placing your head in" this animal's "mouth" The lion's mouth |
#3325, aired 1999-02-05 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: When you anger or annoy someone, you "get his" this Goat |
#3308, aired 1999-01-13 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $100: Stay the course & don't change these "in midstream" horses |
#3308, aired 1999-01-13 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: To do this is to keep your mouth tightly shut like a bivalve to clam up |
#3308, aired 1999-01-13 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $300: Now meaning very relaxed, to be as "loose as" this animal originally meant you were promiscuous a goose |
#3308, aired 1999-01-13 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: If someone is weeping these reptilian drops, he's pretending to grieve crocodile tears |
#3308, aired 1999-01-13 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $500: When I do something well, it leaves me feeling "as proud as" this fowl a peacock |
#3232, aired 1998-09-29 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: The correct response should roll off your tongue "like water off" this bird's "back" Duck |
#3232, aired 1998-09-29 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: If you receive a horse as a gift, "Never" do this Look it in the mouth |
#3232, aired 1998-09-29 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $600: These farm animals "may fly, but they are very unlikely birds" Pigs |
#3232, aired 1998-09-29 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $800: You might "as well as be hanged for a sheep as" one of these Lamb |
#3232, aired 1998-09-29 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $1000: "Don't mistake an old" one of these "for a preacher because of his beard" Goat |
#3164, aired 1998-05-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $100: Proverbially, it's what the mice do "when the cat's away" play |
#3164, aired 1998-05-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $200: In other words, "Similar to a flying mammal leaving Hades" like a bat out of Hell |
#3164, aired 1998-05-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $300: If these are "deserting the sinking ship", you might want to get off rats |
#3164, aired 1998-05-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $400: In other words, "As comfy as an insect in a carpet" as snug as a bug in a rug |
#3164, aired 1998-05-07 | BEASTLY EXPRESSIONS $500: If you feel young, you feel like this kind of non-winter barnyard fowl a spring chicken |
Final Jeopardy! Round clues (0 results returned)
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