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World capital serviced by Leonardo da Vinci Airport |
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Featuring disks & a board with triangles, this popular game may be the oldest still played |
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Bred for speed, these dogs carry no unnecessary weight & have very large lungs |
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In Ireland, the small plate next to the dinner plate is for peelings from these |
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Wm. E.E. Owens' "One Man vs. the Establishment" has been rejected by a record 137 of these |
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In the 1930s William Dreyer mixed chocolate ice cream, almonds, & marshmallows to create this |
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Sounds like they're set for arrival of "Purple Rain" star by boat in this capital of Haiti |
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The maximum number of players in Chinese checkers |
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The St. Bernard rescues men from mountains; the Newfoundland rescues men from this |
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Since Italians view this as a staple food, it is offensive to get drunk on it at meals |
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Queen of mysteries who also wrote "straight" novels under the name Mary Westmacott |
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He realized that "going the distance" would prove he "wasn't just another bum from the neighborhood" |
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The largest population center in the Mid-East, its Arabic name is "El Qahira", "The victorious" |
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Popular board game also known as draughts |
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Command used to make a dog walk on handler's left side without pulling leash or lagging behind |
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Common utensil you'd find set above the plate when you sit down to dine in East Germany |
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Critics called this character 1st introduced in "Life on the Mississippi", "a noble savage" |
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Musical featuring "Dammit Janet" & the following:
"It's astounding / Time is fleeting..." |
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Founded by famed conquistador Gonzalo Jimenez de Quesada on Chibcha Indian site "Bacata" |
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Parlor game for 2 groups of players taking turns as "actors" & "audience" |
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The English don't smoke at formal dinners until after this toast at the meal's end |
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Literary social movement of the '50s advocating nonconformity, poverty, & jazz |
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Sporting a pilot's helmet & June Foray's voice, he debuted in November, 1959 on ABC |
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Putting its letters in alphabetical order, this capital is "AAACCRS" |
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On the 1st roll, the 3 numbers which mean "craps" |
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In a Beatles' song, he "checked into his room, only to find Gideon's Bible" |
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