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The stars on the U.S. flag represent these |
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King Arthur, Merlin, Morgan Le Fey |
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Gazpacho, a soup often flavored with garlic, was created in this country |
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Simple, like plunging from one felled tree trunk |
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Of Kukla, Fran or Ollie, the nickname preferred by the celebrity seen here (Mr. North) |
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Rejecting this band in 1962, Decca Records said, "We don't like their sound & guitar music is on the way out" |
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It's how the president rejects legislation passed by Congress |
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Nancy, Workhouse Boys, Fagin's Gang |
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Jambonneaux doesn't mean beautiful jam; it's a fancy French word for this animal's knuckles |
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Resemble a feline who ingested a yellow bird |
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Coy is his real first name, but he's hardly coy: his real-life high school voted him "Biggest Flirt" |
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An 1876 Western Union internal memo said this device has "many shortcomings" & "is inherently of no value to us" |
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Before Al Gore, he was the last president of the Senate |
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Magaldi, Peron's mistress, People of Argentina |
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This nutritious tissue found in bones can be made into balls that the Germans call markklosschen |
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An ancient alma mater attempt |
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It's the full first name of the star seen here; she shares it with another comedienne/talk show host |
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"Who the hell wants to hear actors talk?" asked one of these Hollywood "Brothers" in 1927 |
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Title given most of the people in the president's cabinet |
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Rabbi, Fruma-Sarah, Grandma Tzeitel |
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In India ghee, a semi-fluid butter, is often made from the milk of this animal |
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Beam from ear to ear, during an appearance before a clandestine Kodak |
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It was the original first name of the actor seen here, & of his famous father (Beau Bridges) |
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In 1929 a Yale economics professor said these "have reached...a permanently high plateau" |
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Prior to 1913 senators were chosen by these bodies, not the voters |
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Minnie Fay, Waiters, Horace Vandergelder |
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Some Canadians cook this reindeer relative whose name is from the Algonquin for "pawer" |
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Uncurbed kissers scuttle scows |
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It's the name the astronaut seen here goes by; his real first name is Edwin |
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In 1899 Charles Duell, the head of this U.S. "Office" said, "Everything that can be invented has been invented" |
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