Clues | Answers |
---|---|
Informally, Surrey Country Cricket Club’s home ground | the oval |
Iris Murdoch novel set in a lay religious community next door to a convent | The Bell |
Jacques ____ originated deconstruction as a form of semiotic analysis | DERRIDA |
John ____’s architecture in London includes the terraced houses of Park Crescent | NASH |
Judging other cultures by the standards of one’s own | ethnocentric |
Location where 51D of Citium taught, and the origin of the name for his followers | the Stoa |
Lockheed wide-body aircraft produced between 1968 and 1984 | TRISTAR |
Loose skin hanging from the throat of various mammals | DEWLAP |
Member of an eastern European church acknowledging papal supremacy but using its own liturgy | UNIAT |
Mullein is the common name for this flowering plant genus | VERBASCUM |
New York suburb, whose name comes from a Dutch equivalent to “esquire” | YONKERS |
Novel partly about Billy Pilgrim’s wartime experiences | Slaughterhouse-Five |
Originally American terpsichorean fitness classes | DANCERCISE |
Rainbow-coloured arboreal parrot from the Lesser Sunda Islands | Iris Lorikeet |
Recess where you might find seating or shelving | ALCOVE |
Rhyming facetious slang for common office equipment | wagger-pagger-bagger |
Sansevieria trifasciata, an evergreen perennial plant | mother-in-law's tongue |
Someone in a dodgy business | RACKETEER |
Spanish name for a gully, especially in the SW USA | ARROYO |
The (non-biblical) supposed abode of the souls of unbaptised infants | LIMBO |
The Hawthorne ____ is the modification of behaviour by those who know they are being observed | EFFECT |
The kind of eclipse that is always safe to look at | LUNAR |
The only successful defender of the Olympic heptathlon title | Jackie Joyner-Kersee |
The RNLI use all-weather and ____ lifeboats | INSHORE |
Thomas ____ had a research lab at Menlo Park, New Jersey | EDISON |
To care, as Rhett Butler famously didn’t | give a damn |
What you do to sauce with a whisk | AERATE |
When accused by Debussy of ignoring form, Erik ____’s response was the piano duet Three Fragments in the Form of a Pear | SATIE |
____ of Citium and ____ of Elea were both ancient Greek philosophers | ZENO |
____ tides are those with the smallest range | NEAP |
Clues | Answers |
---|---|
“Always ____ trams” (Highway Code) | give way to |
“Shee, you guys are so ____ it’s a wonder your bums don’t fall off” (Zaphod Beeblebrox) | UNHIP |
480 grains = 1 _____ | troy ounce |
A bone attached to the sternum | true rib |
A friction hitch devised by an Austrian mountaineer | prusik knot |
A rock transported by glacial action | ERRATIC |
A short poem, especially a pastoral dialogue or soliloquy | ECLOGUE |
Arthur ____ was the resident antiques expert on the BBC show Going for a Song | NEGUS |
Band name seen on a fictitious band’s bass drum in the video for New Order’s Crystal, later used by an American rock band | The Killers |
Brand of black and white film, now made in Cheshire | ILFORD |
British vehicle launched at the Amsterdam motor show in 1948 | Land Rover |
Charles Édouard Guillaume invented this nickel/iron alloy | INVAR |
Chelsea or Manchester City will win the ____ today | FA Community Shield |
Component of cash registers and some calculators | ink roller |
Content of a snow dome in titles for BBC World Cup 2018 coverage | St Basil's Cathedral |
Done to satisfy superstition or ensure adequate provision | for luck |
Earning no rent | UNLET |
Eastbourne’s ____ Park is the home of a tennis tournament | DEVONSHIRE |
Emperor who killed his mother, two wives, and himself | NERO |
Engineer whose SR-N1 hovercraft first crossed the English Channel in 1959 | Sir Christopher Cockerell |
Fictional country in Anthony Hope’s The Prisoner of Zenda | RURITANIA |
Film starting with a four-letter word used five times | Four Weddings And A Funeral |
For some, these include slow drivers and noisy eaters | pet hates |
Iconic headgear for Ena Sharples in Coronation Street | HAIRNET |
If necessary, ____ sugar can be made from granulated sugar with a pestle and mortar | ICING |
In clichéd language, this is wreaked | HAVOC |
Indian unleavened flatbread | CHAPATI |
Informally in backgammon, make a move that puts one of your opponent’s pieces on the bar | hit a blot |
Informally, “La grande ____” is the Tour de France | BOUCLE |
Informally, a parasitic mite larva, causing skin itching | CHIGGER |
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