Jeopardy! Round, Double Jeopardy! Round, or Tiebreaker Round clues (20 results returned)
#8944, aired 2023-10-05 | ARCHITECTURE TERMS $1200: This low wall on the top of a castle may feature crenellation a parapet |
#2, aired 2020-01-07 | ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN $400: Julia Morgan designed this 68,500-square-foot home in San Simeon, California in the Mediterranean Revival style Hearst Castle |
#7960, aired 2019-03-29 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $400: Tours of Norwich Castle include this place of incarceration, complete with torture instruments dungeon |
#7960, aired 2019-03-29 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $800: A chandler was a castle's store room; its name is directly related to these that were stored there candles |
#7960, aired 2019-03-29 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $1200: A tiltyard was a space where knights practiced their riding while using this weapon, basically the spear 2.0 lance |
#7960, aired 2019-03-29 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $1600: From the Italian "scarpa" or slope, it was a steep slope in front of a castle to slow an attacking enemy escarpment |
#7960, aired 2019-03-29 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $3,000 (Daily Double): 4-letter name for the innermost & strongest building near the center of a castle the keep |
#5801, aired 2009-11-30 | ARCHITECTURE $2000: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew shows a castle wall on the monitor.) The name of this defensive wall comes from words meaning "protect" & "chest"; it's still used as a protective barrier on bridges & balconies a parapet |
#5391, aired 2008-02-04 | ARCHITECTURE $1000: This low wall around the edge of a castle roof was designed to protect soldiers from falling off a parapet |
#5005, aired 2006-05-19 | ARCHITECTURE $1200: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew stands on the set of Beauty and the Beast at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in New York.) The castle in "Beauty and the Beast" reimagines this architectural style that evolved from the Romanesque in the 12th century Gothic |
#4462, aired 2004-01-20 | ARCHITECTURE TERMS $1200: This low wall on the top of a castle may feature crenellation parapet/battlement |
#2557, aired 1995-10-17 | FOREIGN ARCHITECTURE $600: An early type of castle was the Motte-and-this Bailey |
#2500, aired 1995-06-16 | ARCHITECTURE $800: James Renwick designed "The Castle", part of this museum complex, in Norman Romanesque style Smithsonian |
#2276, aired 1994-06-27 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $200: Spanning a moat or ditch, it was raised in times of emergency the drawbridge |
#2276, aired 1994-06-27 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $400: What was once a term for the living quarters became this word for the castle's prison the dungeon |
#2276, aired 1994-06-27 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $600 (Daily Double): A windlass was used to raise & lower this huge wood & iron grating the portcullis |
#2276, aired 1994-06-27 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $600: The Balistraria was the room where these weapons were kept or the windows through which they were aimed arrows (bows & arrows, or crossbows) |
#2276, aired 1994-06-27 | CASTLE ARCHITECTURE $1000: This immense room was used for general gatherings & dining the Great Hall |
#1909, aired 1992-12-17 | ARCHITECTURE $1000: From French for "sliding door", it's a heavy iron grating which can be lowered over a castle door a portcullis |
#1843, aired 1992-09-16 | ARCHITECTURE $500: On a castle, a turret is a small one of these, usually forming part of a larger structure a tower |
Final Jeopardy! Round clues (0 results returned)
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