Jeopardy! Round, Double Jeopardy! Round, or Tiebreaker Round clues (194 results returned)

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

Final Jeopardy! Round clues (0 results returned)

Players (0 results returned)



Didn't find what you wanted? Try your J! Archive search using Google, Bing, or Yahoo!

The J! Archive is created by fans, for fans. Scraping, republication, monetization, and malicious use prohibited; this site may use cookies and collect identifying information. See terms. The Jeopardy! game show and all elements thereof, including but not limited to copyright and trademark thereto, are the property of Jeopardy Productions, Inc. and are protected under law. This website is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or operated by Jeopardy Productions, Inc. Join the discussion at JBoard.tv.