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    | You've heard of this biblical guy's "ladder", but there's also a dangerous cave system near Austin with his name | Jacob 
 
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    | There were 6 British kings named this, but saying "By" him actually meant "By God" | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 George
 
 
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    | At the end of the book "The Maltese Falcon", this private eye realizes that Brigid is a murderer & turns her in to the police | Sam Spade 
 
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    | In 2017 Audrey Luna hit the highest note ever at NYC's Metropolitan Opera singing in this vocal range in "The Exterminating Angel" | soprano 
 
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    | Be careful in Mexico's underwater Cenote Esqueleto; it's nicknamed this, like Indiana Jones' title destination in his second film | the Temple of Doom 
 
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    | This "sticky" oath, a variant of "damnation", goes back to 1790 & may be derived from "eternal" | tarnation 
 
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    | Sort of a floating palace in Edinburgh, the Britannia is the royal this fancy type of ship | a yacht 
 
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    | From the Latin for "bruise", it's a bruise in which capillaries may have been ruptured | a contusion 
 
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    | This Aerosmith lead singer has shown his own high note skills in the hits "Crazy" & "Dream On" | Steven Tyler 
 
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    | "Always stay with the tour group" is one of the rules at this "really big" cave system in Kentucky | Mammoth Cave 
 
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    | This, also the surname of  a prolific 19th c. British author, was sometimes substituted for "devil" in oaths | (Alex: [Prior to the wager] I think you've found them all since you've been a contestant on the program.) (Brayden: Think so.)
 
 dickens
 
 
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    | In 1915 a U-boat sank this British liner, sending nearly 1,200 souls to a watery grave | the Lusitania 
 
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    | Lithotripsy uses ultrasonic shock waves to break up these | (Alex: [Prior to the wager] And you have turned this game into a runaway once again.) 
 kidney stones
 
 
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    | "Oh, I've had such a curious dream!" remarks the title girl at the end of this work | Alice in Wonderland 
 
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    | She hit a high E flat singing "Let It Go" & then hit it again with "Into The Unknown" from "Frozen 2" | Idina Menzel 
 
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    | Beware! Divers have perished in the Blue Hole, a dangerous diving site near the Sinai Peninsula on this sea | the Red Sea 
 
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    | Instead of referencing the almighty's son, this rhyming phrase with the same initial letters was used | (Spencer: Oh. Uh... oh, I'm sorry.) 
 jeepers creepers
 
 
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    | The "P" in a PT boat stands for patrol; the "T" stands for this type of explosive weapon | a torpedo 
 
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    | Reduced activity of tyrosinase, needed to make melanin, results in this condition | (Brayden: What is [*]? Albino.) 
 albinism
 
 
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    | The end of this novel hints at cannibalism aboard a lifeboat whose occupants were people, not a boy & zoo animals | the Life of Pi 
 
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    | A tenor in this title role hits a high A flat singing "Let your soul take you where you long to be!" from "The Music Of The Night" | The Phantom of the Opera 
 
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    | Hold on tight descending into Krubera Cave, the world's 2nd deepest, found in these European mountains in Georgia | the Caucasus 
 
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    | On St. Patrick's Day, you might hear someone exclaim "Faith &" this word meaning "by God" | (Brayden: What is blarney?) (Rhonda: What is Begorria? Begorray.)
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 (Alex: You added a letter that made it incorrect; faith and [*], not "Begorria". Less than a minute now.)
 
 Begorra
 
 
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    | This clipper ship that sailed from Australia to London 25 days faster than other ships is now a sailing museum in Greenwich, London | the Cutty Sark 
 
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    | Acid reflux problems can cause dysphagia, difficulty in doing this | swallowing 
 
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    | Turns out the doctors of the title place of this Dennis Lehane novel have been manipulating a U.S. marshal, who is really an inmate | Shutter Island 
 
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    | Mario Lanza is no ordinary vineyard worker in the film "Serenade", singing the high notes of "Nessun Dorma" from this Puccini opera | Turandot 
 
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