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This river's name comes from a word for "arrow", implying that it is faster than the Euphrates |
the Tigris
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A Scottish castle is home to this school of witchcraft & wizardry |
Hogwarts
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Spoken in medieval southern France, the dialect langue d'Oc got its name because Oc, not this, meant yes there |
(Mayim: [*], yes.) [Laughter]
oui
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Saying it wasn't a "protest song", Bob Dylan did include the lyrics "How many times must the cannonballs fly" |
"Blowin' In The Wind"
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As Germany's "chancellor of change", you ended military conscription & introduced a minimum wage |
Angela Merkel
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A small figurine like an Academy Award |
a statuette
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In Sanskrit, the name of this river comes from "sindhu", which means "river" |
(Emily: What is the Ganges?) (Anjali: What is [**]?) [Anjali's response was ruled incorrect; changed to correct before revealing the Final Jeopardy! clue]
the Indus River (the Sindh)
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This Prague author's unfinished novel "The Castle" has a man named K trying unsuccessfully to access the title place |
Kafka
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In 2008 this European country's parliament passed an act officially adopting Brazilian spellings of hundreds of words |
Portugal
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Seen here, Alexandra Shipp played a younger version of this film mutant originally portrayed by Halle Berry |
Storm
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You won the U.S. National All-Around Gymnastics Championships from 2013 to 2016 & in 2018, 2019 & 2021 |
Simone Biles
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At the recent Tokyo Olympics, Alix Klineman & April Ross netted gold in this sport |
beach volleyball
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This river that gave its name to a Georgia city was known as Rio Dulce, or "sweet river", to early Spanish explorers |
(Emily: What is the... Chattahoochee?)
the Savannah River
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In this 17th century religious allegory, Christian & Hopeful are imprisoned for a time at Doubting Castle |
[Anjali does not include "The" in her response.]
The Pilgrim's Progress
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Ladino, or Sephardi, was carried to the Mideast by people expelled from their homeland in 1492 at the urging of this judicial body |
the Inquisition
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Formerly the Hartford Whalers, they blew into Raleigh in 1997 |
the Hurricanes
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You took a constitutional oath on October 26, 2020, |
(Amy Coney) Barrett
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An expert in the formal rules & procedures of running an assembly, like the British legislature |
a parliamentarian
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Some Europeans called this Chinese river the Blue River, perhaps to distinguish it from the Yellow River |
the Yangtze
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A key antagonist in "The Chronicles of Narnia", she lives in a castle full of stone statues |
the White Witch
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In 1898 an explosion killed the last known speaker of this Adriatic language that shared its name with a dog breed |
(Mark: What is Pyrenees?)
Dalmatian
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"Blood On The Coal" by The Folksmen is on the soundtrack album of this Christopher Guest mockumentary |
(Mayim: I highly recommend it.)
A Mighty Wind
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You served as Archbishop of Cape Town from 1986 to 1996 |
(Desmond) Tutu
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This adjective means having no previous example known |
unprecedented
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A king of Alba Longa, near present-day Castel Gandolfo, drowned in this river, which was then named for him |
the Tiber
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Young Cassandra Mortmain lives in the rundown title structure in "I Capture the Castle" by this "101 Dalmatians" author |
Dodie Smith
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Isolated from its romantic relatives, Romanian has been influenced by this language group of neighbors like Serbia & Bulgaria |
Slavic
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Spencer Tracy was on the side of evolution while Fredric March argued creationism in this classic 1960 film |
Inherit the Wind
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After a huge upset in the 1948 election, you did the honorable thing & conceded to Pres. Truman & sent congratulations |
Dewey
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If you support another person's alibi, you provide this 4-"O" word from the Latin for "to strengthen" |
(Anjali: What is corroborate?)
corroboration
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