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TRIPLE DOUBLE-LETTER WORDS |
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Mary's little sister, she succeeded William on the British throne in 1702 |
Queen Anne
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Named for a director of athletics of the New York City Downtown Athletic Club, it was won for the first time by Jay Berwanger in 1935 |
the Heisman Trophy
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Leyte Gulf, Kursk |
(Alex: [After reading the clue] Which war?)
World War II
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(I'm Jon Hamm.) One of Don Draper's best pitches came when he said this company's slide projector is a time machine for our lives' sweet moments |
Kodak
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It's a nacreous concretion formed around a foreign body, like a grain of sand |
a pearl
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In the U.S. House of Representatives, these include Agriculture, Judiciary & Ways & Means |
committees
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He's the actor seen here who in 1975 put down his bowler & picked up a top hat & a knighthood |
Charlie Chaplin
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Pass the milk! The guy seen here tops the 150-pound Borg-Warner Trophy given to the winner of this annual event |
the Indy 500
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Inchon, Pusan |
(Meredith: What is Vietnam?)
the Korean War
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(I'm Christina Hendricks.) On the Season 2 premiere, office manager Joan had a new boyfriend & the office had this new machine that revolutionized clerical work in the 1960s |
(Meredith: What is a copy machine?) [Alex inhales deeply.] (Meredith: [*]?)
a Xerox machine
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The name of this gemstone comes from the Spanish piedra de ijada, "hip stone"; it was thought to cure kidney diseases |
(David: What is... sapphire?) (Alex: No--ijada--[*].)
jade
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This river receives the waters of more than 100 tributaries, including the Des Moines & Arkansas Rivers |
the Mississippi
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He penned "Cakes and Ale", a 1930 satire of British life |
(Steffa: Who is Noel Coward?)
W. Somerset Maugham
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Ahoy! This coveted trophy seen here is the oldest active trophy in international sport |
the America's Cup
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Passchendaele, Somme |
World War I
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(I'm Vincent Kartheiser.) Pete Campbell beat out an "O Little Town of" this steel company idea with his own that called the company "The Backbone of America" |
Bethlehem
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Chrome & iron are what give this, red corundum, its color |
the ruby
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This is the person who records the accounts & transactions of a business |
a bookkeeper
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One of the 2 prime ministers of Great Britain during World War I |
(David: Who is Chamberlain?) (Steffa: Who is Baldwin?)
Lloyd George (or Asquith)
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Whoop-de-do! The championship trophy seen here was named for this late NBA commissioner |
(Alex: And that would be the [*] Trophy.)
Larry O'Brien
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Balaklava, Inkerman |
(Steffa: What is the Franco-Prussian War?)
the Crimean War
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(I'm Elisabeth Moss.) In the Season 1 finale, Peggy Olson gave birth to a son & became a copywriter with this acne treatment as her first account |
Clearasil
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It's actually the hard, colorful calcareous skeleton secreted by certain marine polyps |
coral
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This adverb describes how an act that had a favorable outcome was performed |
successfully
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In the 17th century this British empirical philosopher opined, "No man's knowledge here can go beyond his experience" |
(Meredith: Who is Hume?) (Steffa: Who is Pope?)
John Locke
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Seen here in 1950, it's the oldest pro-league trophy in North America & gets to be taken home by each member of the winning team |
the Stanley Cup
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Amphipolis, Syracuse |
the Peloponnesian War
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(Jon Hamm reads the last clue.) In the 1st episode of "Mad Men", Don Draper won over the clients with a campaign about the "toasted" goodness of this product |
(Steffa: What is tobacco?) (Alex: [Exhales] Be more specific.)
(Lucky Strike) cigarettes
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For their resemblance to plant foliage, inclusions that cloud this green gem are called jardin |
(Meredith: [Whispering to David, after Alex reveals the correct response] I was scared.)
emeralds
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The person to whom you are sending a letter |
the addressee
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