Jeopardy! Round, Double Jeopardy! Round, or Tiebreaker Round clues (194 results returned)
#8955, aired 2023-10-20 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: Come on, champ, you have to be brave & "keep a stiff" this upper lip |
#8955, aired 2023-10-20 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: It's an honest & sincere talk between 2 people (& their cardiac muscles) a heart to heart |
#8955, aired 2023-10-20 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Someone as naive or innocent as a newborn baby is said to be this "moist" phrase wet behind the ears |
#8955, aired 2023-10-20 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: When you're idle or just plain bored, you do this with your pollex digits, literally or figuratively twiddle your thumbs |
#8955, aired 2023-10-20 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: To attack where someone is most vulnerable is to go for one of these large veins, here or here jugular |
#8851, aired 2023-04-17 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: Many people with a herniated intervertebral one of these in their spine don't feel symptoms a disc |
#8851, aired 2023-04-17 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: Consisting of one systole & one diastole, this happens about 100,000 times a day in humans a heartbeat |
#8851, aired 2023-04-17 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Buccal is an adjective referring to this part of your face your cheeks |
#8851, aired 2023-04-17 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: This word referring to the sole comes before "fasciitis" in an injury of the foot plantar |
#8851, aired 2023-04-17 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: The bony socket that surrounds the eye is also called this; sounds space-y orbital |
#8831, aired 2023-03-20 | "ME" $1000: A body part is found in this word describing one who refuses to tell the truth in plain language mealymouthed |
#8755, aired 2022-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: As a noun, it can be the edge of a road; as a verb, take the burden or the blame shoulder |
#8755, aired 2022-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: To apply this body part to "the line" or "the mark" is to observe the rules toe |
#8755, aired 2022-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: This "music" can mean a pitch thrown high, near the batter's head chin music |
#8755, aired 2022-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: If you mouth off to someone, you give them lip, or what the Brits call this other facial part cheek |
#8755, aired 2022-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: The fruit of the rose the hip |
#10, aired 2022-02-15 | LANGUAGE LAB $400: En français, la main gauche is this specific body part the left hand |
#8309, aired 2021-01-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: Someone who changes their mind about taking a trip or tying the knot gets cold these feet |
#8309, aired 2021-01-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: In slang it means to I.D. a criminal to authorities finger |
#8309, aired 2021-01-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Express support without following through & you're merely paying this "service" lip |
#8309, aired 2021-01-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: In the title of Shakira's first U.S. No. 1 hit, these "Don't Lie" Hips |
#8309, aired 2021-01-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: The second of Thornton Wilder's 2 Pulitzer Prize-winning plays mentions these 2 body parts skin & teeth |
#8261, aired 2020-10-19 | MILITARY RANK LANGUAGE $1,000 (Daily Double): Of the human body corporal |
#8224, aired 2020-05-28 | THE LANGUAGE OF DE-FEET $400: This lingual "disease" of making inappropriate statements has 2 body parts foot in mouth |
#7957, aired 2019-03-26 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: "Get off on the wrong ____" foot |
#7957, aired 2019-03-26 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: "Keep a stiff upper ____" lip |
#7957, aired 2019-03-26 | BODY LANGUAGE $1200: "____ room" or "____ grease" elbow |
#7957, aired 2019-03-26 | BODY LANGUAGE $1600: "____ of contention" bone |
#7957, aired 2019-03-26 | BODY LANGUAGE $2000: "Gird one's ____" loins |
#7843, aired 2018-10-17 | I "NV" YOU $1200: Body language, where your physical actions do the talking, is called this type of communication nonverbal |
#7830, aired 2018-09-28 | COLORFUL LANGUAGE $1600: It means "eloquent", not "having a precious metallic body part" silver-tongued |
#7755, aired 2018-05-04 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: "Cut off your ____ to spite your face" nose |
#7755, aired 2018-05-04 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: "By the skin of his ____" teeth |
#7755, aired 2018-05-04 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Alluding to a bad boxer: "Lead with one's ____" chin |
#7755, aired 2018-05-04 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: "Rack your ____" brain |
#7755, aired 2018-05-04 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: "The evil that men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their ____" bones |
#7361, aired 2016-09-19 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: A young bovine a calf |
#7361, aired 2016-09-19 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: You've got to hand it to this tropical tree a palm |
#7361, aired 2016-09-19 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: The 4 equal parts of a relay race legs |
#7361, aired 2016-09-19 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: To face & endure something unpleasant, even nauseating stomach |
#7361, aired 2016-09-19 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: Nerve or impertinence; in a 1904 novel Lord Elmsdale says, "That chap's got some" cheek |
#6582, aired 2013-04-09 | "BODY" LANGUAGE $200: A person employed to protect an individual from physical harm a bodyguard |
#6582, aired 2013-04-09 | "BODY" LANGUAGE $400: A person who pries into the affairs of others a busybody |
#6582, aired 2013-04-09 | "BODY" LANGUAGE $600: In hockey, you "throw" this to obstruct a foe's movement (harshly) a body check |
#6582, aired 2013-04-09 | "BODY" LANGUAGE $800: Job of one whose body subs for a lead actor in a nude scene; I was Brad Pitt's... OK, who laughed?! a body double |
#6582, aired 2013-04-09 | "BODY" LANGUAGE $1000: A protective protein aka immunoglobulin an antibody |
#6533, aired 2013-01-30 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: To "put my" this "down" means I'm ending the discussion once & for all the foot |
#6533, aired 2013-01-30 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: "Having thin" this means criticism bothers you skin |
#6533, aired 2013-01-30 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Having this "in the pie" means you're meddling in something your finger |
#6533, aired 2013-01-30 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: You may be "chilled to" this; I'm "bad to" it the bone |
#6533, aired 2013-01-30 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: Cowardly? You're "lily-" this livered |
#6476, aired 2012-11-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: "Pay through the ____" nose |
#6476, aired 2012-11-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: "An albatross around one's ____" neck |
#6476, aired 2012-11-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: "Tongue in ____" cheek |
#6476, aired 2012-11-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: "In the ____ of Morpheus" arms |
#6476, aired 2012-11-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: "An army marches on its ____" stomach |
#6387, aired 2012-05-29 | PSYCHOLOGY $800: Noun for feeling as shown by facial expression or body language; it may be "flat" in people with schizophrenia affect |
#6250, aired 2011-11-18 | ANTHROPOLOGY $800: Kinesics is nonverbal communication or this "language" for which Cosmopolitan has an online decoder body language |
#6089, aired 2011-02-17 | WORDS & PHRASES $400: The word language comes from "lingua", Latin for this body part tongue |
#6063, aired 2011-01-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: Come on, champ, you have to be brave & "keep a stiff" this an upper lip |
#6063, aired 2011-01-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: It's an honest & sincere talk between 2 people (& their cardiac muscles) a heart to heart |
#6063, aired 2011-01-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Someone as naive or innocent as a newborn baby is said to be this "moist" phrase still wet behind the ears |
#6063, aired 2011-01-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: When vou're idle or just plain bored, you do this with your pollex digits, literally or figuratively twiddle your thumbs |
#6063, aired 2011-01-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew stands in front of a diagram of a human skeleton.) To attack where someone is most vulnerable is to go for one of these large veins here or here go for the jugular |
#5950, aired 2010-06-25 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: A kleptomaniac could be accused of having "sticky" these fingers |
#5950, aired 2010-06-25 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: Intimidation using looks or words is called this kind of "beating" brow beating |
#5950, aired 2010-06-25 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: If you're earning money rapidly, you're said to be making it this body part "over" this partner body part hand over fist |
#5950, aired 2010-06-25 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: This 2-word phrase means space to work comfortably & mentions a certain joint elbow room |
#5950, aired 2010-06-25 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: To seriously apply oneself or redouble one's efforts is to this body part "down" knuckle |
#5644, aired 2009-03-05 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: Equip with a gun arm |
#5644, aired 2009-03-05 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: One stage of a journey leg |
#5644, aired 2009-03-05 | BODY LANGUAGE $1200: Hug & kiss, maybe in a car neck |
#5644, aired 2009-03-05 | BODY LANGUAGE $2000: To tolerate or endure to stomach |
#5644, aired 2009-03-05 | BODY LANGUAGE $3,000 (Daily Double): Cool, with it, stylish hip |
#5526, aired 2008-09-22 | COLORFUL LANGUAGE $1200: (I'm astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson.) In my latest book, "Death by" one of these, I refer to a process called spaghettification, in which differences in gravity across your body stretch you long & thin a black hole |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: Hard physical work is made easier when you apply this type of "grease" elbow |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: Lentigo senilis is a medical term for these brown signs of age on the skin liver spots |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | BODY LANGUAGE $1200: You may "pay" someone this type of insincere respect, expressed with part of the mouth but not acted on lip service |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | BODY LANGUAGE $2,000 (Daily Double): Said when you suspect you're being misled, this phrase may come from British muggers known as "trippers up" you're pulling my leg |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | BODY LANGUAGE $2000: One horsepower is equal to 550 of these units per second foot-pounds |
#5438, aired 2008-04-09 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: To know how many of you showed up for the 3-hour video of my trip to Manitoba, I'll take this "count" a head count |
#5438, aired 2008-04-09 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: Hyphenated adjective meaning so appetizing you salivate mouth-watering |
#5438, aired 2008-04-09 | BODY LANGUAGE $1200: A drink taken for ocular stimulation on waking up an eye-opener |
#5438, aired 2008-04-09 | BODY LANGUAGE $1600: Sir, to toy with a woman's affections makes you a cad, a bounder, this--technically a calcaneus a heel |
#5438, aired 2008-04-09 | BODY LANGUAGE $2000: This type of pork-barrel spending refers to funds directed to a member of Congress' pet project an earmark |
#5226, aired 2007-05-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: Innocent & naive? You must be "wet behind" these the ears |
#5226, aired 2007-05-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: To pay or settle; it often precedes "the bill" to foot |
#5226, aired 2007-05-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: It can be a dialect or a bell clapper the tongue |
#5226, aired 2007-05-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: Your messy room at home might be one of these "of contention" with your parents a bone |
#5226, aired 2007-05-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: A rounded mass of radicchio, for example a head |
#4753, aired 2005-04-13 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: Arnold spent his first hour at work enjoying a latte & "twiddling" these, aka the pollices the thumbs |
#4753, aired 2005-04-13 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: The boss held these "akimbo" while demanding to know why Arnold was late again his arms |
#4753, aired 2005-04-13 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Arnold "shrugged" these while trying to come up with an excuse his shoulders |
#4753, aired 2005-04-13 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: Arnold's started "growling" at 10 A.M. his stomach |
#4753, aired 2005-04-13 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: At quitting time Arnold "barked" one of these against a wastebasket in his mad dash for the door a shin |
#4662, aired 2004-12-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: Manucher Ghorbanifar, an Iranian dealer in these, was involved in the 1980s swap of them for hostages arms |
#4662, aired 2004-12-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: Compensation owed from an earlier time is this type of "pay" back pay |
#4662, aired 2004-12-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: A sailor stores his possessions in a sea one a sea chest |
#4662, aired 2004-12-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: (Sarah of the Clue Crew joins snowboarders on the slopes.) "James! Let's see a hand plant!" Watch as he places his hand on the top edge of the half-pipe, which has this anatomical term the lip |
#4662, aired 2004-12-07 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: King Kalakaua, who helped revive the ancient hula, said hula is this kind of beat "of the Hawaiian people" the heart |
#4392, aired 2003-10-14 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: To have this "to the wind" is to wait until others have decided before committing oneself your finger |
#4392, aired 2003-10-14 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: When Daily Variety reports that a studio's prexy has ankled, it means its president did this left the job |
#4392, aired 2003-10-14 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Someone who keeps saying the wrong thing has this, a play on the name of a cattle disease foot-and-mouth |
#4392, aired 2003-10-14 | BODY LANGUAGE $1,000 (Daily Double): What you may get from having that extra helping of pie, or what you do when you complain about it bellyache |
#4392, aired 2003-10-14 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: When it comes before "the burden" or "the blame", it's a synonym for "assume" shoulder |
#4226, aired 2003-01-06 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: The cerebrum, a major part of this organ, is said to look like a large, shelled walnut brain |
#4226, aired 2003-01-06 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: Students know that this black opening in the center of the eye controls the amount of light that enters pupil |
#4226, aired 2003-01-06 | BODY LANGUAGE $1200: The femur, the body's largest bone, is also called this, after the part of the leg it's in thighbone |
#4226, aired 2003-01-06 | BODY LANGUAGE $2000: This largest artery carries blood to most of the other arteries in the body aorta |
#4226, aired 2003-01-06 | BODY LANGUAGE $6,000 (Daily Double): About once an hour this pair of organs cleanses all of the body's blood the kidneys |
#4222, aired 2002-12-31 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: If these are "burning", someone is talking about you ears |
#4222, aired 2002-12-31 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: Something extremely obvious is "as plain as" this the nose on your face |
#4222, aired 2002-12-31 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: If you have a desire to travel, these are "itchy" your feet |
#4222, aired 2002-12-31 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: No one would understand if you literally "spoke wth" this -- it means what was said is meant to be humorous tongue-in-cheek |
#4222, aired 2002-12-31 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: An automatic or unthinking response, like when the doctor taps your patellar tendon knee-jerk reaction |
#4208, aired 2002-12-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $200 (Daily Double): Really cool, fashionable with it hip |
#4208, aired 2002-12-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: Smooch or make out neck |
#4208, aired 2002-12-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: 12 inches foot |
#4208, aired 2002-12-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Seed-bearing spike of corn ear |
#4208, aired 2002-12-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: A branch of an organization or of a river arm |
#4029, aired 2002-02-21 | THE TRIBE HAS SPOKEN $1600: In the Spokane language, Spokane may derive from "people of" this body, a rare sight in Washington winters the sun |
#4022, aired 2002-02-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: It's the flap of material under the laces of a shoe the tongue |
#4022, aired 2002-02-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: They're the projections on a comb or gear teeth |
#4022, aired 2002-02-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: This hinged part of a book usually bears the title the spine |
#4022, aired 2002-02-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: Term for the threading hole of a needle the eye |
#4022, aired 2002-02-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: The edge of a highway, or a strip alongside it the shoulder |
#3935, aired 2001-10-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: If you're hard at work, you're keeping this body part "to the grindstone" your nose |
#3935, aired 2001-10-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: An empathetic person would give you this body part "to cry on" shoulder |
#3935, aired 2001-10-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $300: It's what you're said to "hold" when you're keeping your big mouth shut your tongue |
#3935, aired 2001-10-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: The kind of icy extremities an apprehensive bridegroom gets cold feet |
#3935, aired 2001-10-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: Someone who covets something of great value often says, "I'd give" these canines" "for that" eye teeth |
#3822, aired 2001-03-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: An insufficient punishment is "a slap on" this The wrists |
#3822, aired 2001-03-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: To show someone your indifference, give them the "cold" one Shoulder |
#3822, aired 2001-03-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $300: If this is "out of joint", it could be the internasal suture Nose |
#3822, aired 2001-03-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: This phrase about living precariously from day to day implies the ready consumption of whatever one can get a hold of Living from hand to mouth |
#3822, aired 2001-03-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: Like funds allocated for a specific purpose Earmarked |
#3754, aired 2000-12-21 | AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE $200: The ancient Greeks believed that the soul left the body after death in the form of this insect a butterfly |
#3748, aired 2000-12-13 | DEAD LANGUAGE $300: It's the combustible heap for burning a dead body as part of a funeral rite Pyre |
#3748, aired 2000-12-13 | DEAD LANGUAGE $500: From the Latin for "to fall", it's a dead body, especially one prepared for dissection Cadaver |
#3657, aired 2000-06-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: To "shake" this can mean to hurry up or to dance a leg |
#3657, aired 2000-06-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: To express contempt for someone is to "turn up" this at him nose |
#3657, aired 2000-06-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $300: Facing misfortune bravely while suppressing emotion is called keeping a "stiff" one of these upper lip |
#3657, aired 2000-06-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: When you force someone into submission, you "bring him to" these joints knees |
#3657, aired 2000-06-27 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: Even Shakespeare used the phrase "cheek by" this, in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" jowl |
#3494, aired 1999-11-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: Students especially should know this is the "black hole" in the center of the eye's iris pupil |
#3494, aired 1999-11-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: A membrane called the pericardium encloses this organ the heart |
#3494, aired 1999-11-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $300: There are 6 of these glands that make your mouth water salivary glands |
#3494, aired 1999-11-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: Composed of 8 bones, it's the largest part of the skull; it shields the brain cranium |
#3494, aired 1999-11-11 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: It's the more common name for the easily fractued clavicle Collarbone |
#3337, aired 1999-02-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: Landing an entry-level job is one way of getting this extremity "in the door" Your foot |
#3337, aired 1999-02-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: To unburden yourself of a problem is to "get it off" this -- the body part, not the bureau Your chest |
#3337, aired 1999-02-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: A driver who slows down to look at a car wreck has a rubber one Neck |
#3337, aired 1999-02-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: Your granny might remember when you were this high "to a grasshopper" Knee high |
#3337, aired 1999-02-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $600 (Daily Double): (Hello, I'm Jay Leno) A boxing expression says a person who suffers a setback "takes it" on this body part Chin |
#3279, aired 1998-12-03 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: In days past, a young punk often put "a chip on" this, & dared others to knock it off Shoulder |
#3279, aired 1998-12-03 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: To sense something intuitively is to "feel it in" these calcium storehouses Bones |
#3279, aired 1998-12-03 | BODY LANGUAGE $300: When you act out of pique & harm yourself in the process, you "cut off" this "to spite your face" Your nose |
#3279, aired 1998-12-03 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: A fearsome foe is said to be "armed to" these body parts -- scary! The teeth |
#3279, aired 1998-12-03 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: Insincere words not backed up by deeds are this type of "service" Lip service |
#3124, aired 1998-03-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: A person who acts rashly & harms himself is said to "cut off" this "to spite his face" his nose |
#3124, aired 1998-03-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: It's the type of predictable automatic action some liberals are accused of having knee jerk |
#3124, aired 1998-03-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $300: This word may refer to part of your foot, the end of a loaf of bread, or a despicable cad heel |
#3124, aired 1998-03-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: This term for strenuous extra effort sounds like it means "arm joint lubricant" elbow grease |
#3124, aired 1998-03-12 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: When you inadvertently give someone else the advantage, you "play into" these their hands |
#3052, aired 1997-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: It's said to be "The way to a man's heart" Through his stomach |
#3052, aired 1997-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: A digital phrase meaning to hitchhike Thumb a ride |
#3052, aired 1997-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $300: When you're charged a great deal of money for something, you "pay through" this The nose |
#3052, aired 1997-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: It means too close to tell, especially in horse racing Neck and neck |
#3052, aired 1997-12-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: Derived from the Bible, it immediately follows "An eye for an eye" "A tooth for a tooth" |
#3011, aired 1997-10-06 | LOANWORDS $400: Body part terms schnozzle & tuchis come from the body of words in this language Yiddish |
#2971, aired 1997-06-30 | COMMUNICATION $1000: Developed by Edward Hall, proxemics is the study of this "language", such as crossing one's legs Body language |
#2645, aired 1996-02-16 | VOCABULARY $600: The word language comes from lingua, Latin for this part of the body the tongue |
#2567, aired 1995-10-31 | PSYCH 102 $1000: Kinesics is the study of this "language" body language |
#1978, aired 1993-03-24 | COMMUNICATIONS $200: 2-word term for the gestures & facial expressions a person uses in nonverbal communication body language |
#1255, aired 1990-02-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: The logo used by the Pinkerton Detective Agency led to the use of this term for a private detective private eye |
#1255, aired 1990-02-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: Ironically, this expression came from the fact that male deer have front teeth only in their lower jaw buckteeth |
#1255, aired 1990-02-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $300: Someone able to sniff out a big story for the paper is said to have this a nose for news |
#1255, aired 1990-02-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: When we keep someone at a distance, we're said to keep them this far away at arm's length |
#1255, aired 1990-02-02 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: Meaning maudlin sentimentality, it's often accompanied by the playing of a make-believe violin hearts & flowers |
#1204, aired 1989-11-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: "Rubber baby buggy bumpers" is an example of one these hard-to-say sayings tongue twister |
#1204, aired 1989-11-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: A barnyard chicken would be taking a risk if it stuck out this part of its body neck |
#1204, aired 1989-11-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Something that's very expensive is said to cost these 2 body parts arm & a leg |
#1204, aired 1989-11-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $800: What your doctor calls the patellar reflex, it's come to mean any act done without thinking knee jerk reaction |
#1204, aired 1989-11-23 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: Though applied to people, this phrase probably refers to the fact that older horses have receding gums long in the tooth |
#974, aired 1988-11-24 | LANGUAGES $400: The word "language" comes from the Latin "lingua", meaning this body part the tongue |
#868, aired 1988-05-18 | BODY LANGUAGE $100: Someone who quibbles over trifles is said to be splitting these hairs |
#868, aired 1988-05-18 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: You shouldn't stick yours out; chickens do it on the chopping block, & look where it gets them neck |
#868, aired 1988-05-18 | BODY LANGUAGE $300: If someone mentions yours following "lunk", "dunder", or "chowder", you should be insulted head |
#868, aired 1988-05-18 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: Following the rules, you do this to "the mark" or "the line" toe |
#868, aired 1988-05-18 | BODY LANGUAGE $500: Meaning "blows from a clenched hand", it's another name for boxing fisticuffs |
#35, aired 1984-10-26 | BODY LANGUAGE $200: World-wide way to say yes with your head to nod |
#35, aired 1984-10-26 | BODY LANGUAGE $400: Its position was a matter of life & death to a gladiator thumb |
#35, aired 1984-10-26 | BODY LANGUAGE $600: Boxers would slap each other silly if they didn't make these fists |
#35, aired 1984-10-26 | BODY LANGUAGE $1000: Some experts say it can be traced to infants turning their faces to reject food saying no (shaking the head) |
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