Jeopardy February 03 2021 answers


On this page you will find the Jeopardy February 03 2021 answers and Solutions. We have just finished solving all the 7 crossword clues found today in the puzzle and we have listed them below. Simply click on any of the clues you are having difficulties finding the solution for and a new page with the answer will pop up.


# Question
1 If saw blades with this gemstone in their name seem a bit cheaper than an engagement ring it's because they use synthetic stones
2 This green & brown fabric pattern began with army wear for blending into the scenery
3 Toots & the Maytals pioneered this Jamaican musical style & lead singer Toots Hibbert is credited with naming it
4 That male in singular pronoun form
5 At the age of 12 this future Founding Father was apprenticed to his brother James a printer
6 Toni Morrison wrote her play Desdemona as a response to a production of this Shakespeare play
7 People famous in this profession like Jamie Oliver often use Wüsthof knives from Germany
8 Deerstalkers & derbies are types of these
9 Made with rows of short tubes of different lengths versions of this instrument are played from China to Peru
10 It's used in French personal names to show place of origin
11 Linus Pauling wrote a bestselling book called this vitamin and the Common Cold
12 This British author was married to a woman also named Evelyn--they were called He-Evelyn & She-Evelyn by friends
13 A rip-cut saws along the grain of the wood while this cut goes against the grain
14 This 1983 film inspired a fashion craze of leg warmers & off-the-shoulder sweatshirts; what a feeling!
15 Cante jondo or deep song is a powerful type of this Spanish style of music & dance associated with Gypsies
16 The royal one is used formally by a monarch to refer to him or herself
17 Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water 'Fore I Diiie is a 1971 collection of poetry by this African-American woman
18 In 2020 this author of Dear John returned to familiar territory (love in North Carolina) with The Return
19 The Oliver 777 is one of these machines that bakeries find handy when a customer wants bread for sandwiches
20 This 5-letter fabric popular for jackets bears the name of a Scottish river
21 A fusion of samba & cool jazz bossa nova burst onto the world scene in the 1950s out of this country
22 In the case of
23 He failed in a few candy businesses before founding the Lancaster Caramel Company in 1886; later it was on to chocolate
24 Finally out in 2020 this feminist's The Inseparables was not published in part because Jean-Paul Sartre didn't like it
25 The wavy pattern in the metal of the knife indicates that it is made of steel named for this Mideast capital
26 From the French for horsehair this 19th c. array of fabric & hoops under a skirt was revived by Jean Paul Gaultier
27 This folk music performed by a small group of strolling musicians dressed in traditional costume originated in Jalisco Mexico
28 Plural of thou when talking to a group
29 The movie Rope was partly based on a murder committed by this pair first names Nathan & Richard
30 He began Dombey and Son during a trip to Switzerland in 1846
31 2 impact craters in the Sea of Tranquility are named for these 2 men
32 Though large & powerful this South American empire flourished for only about 100 years until the Spanish conquered it in 1532
33 The 2007 horror film titled this Activity had just 5 credited parts 4 uncredited ones & some creepy atmospherics
34 Published in this southern city beginning in 1856 the Daily Creole was the first African-American daily newspaper
35 An English rebel called Hereward the Wake led resistance to this Norman king even after the conquest
36 A verdant chromosome part
37 If you strain your eyes a bit you can see this spiral galaxy aka M31 without using a telescope
38 Bonners Ferry north of Coeur d'Alene calls itself this state's most friendly town
39 Sandra Bullock learns it's lonely out in space in this 2013 film
40 This London newspaper first published in 1785 had a daily circulation of about 400000 in 2019
41 Norman knights fought in hauberks long coats of this bendable armor
42 The location for a 12-round match
43 Absolute magnitude measures a celestial object's true brightness; this other magnitude is its brightness as seen from Earth
44 In 2019 throngs of people turned out to celebrate the 40th anniversary of this country's Sandinista revolution
45 He played an isolated astronaut in the film Moon
46 The name of this 19th century William Lloyd Garrison abolitionist newspaper reminds us of Simon Bolivar
47 This 231-foot-long strip of linen is an important source of knowledge about the conquest
48 Jargon for the parlor game in which players mark off numbers on a card
49 It's the diameter of a telescope's main lens or mirror
50 The name of these islands off the southern tip of South America means land of fire
51 This acting legend plays the only character in 2013's All Is Lost about a solo sailor in big trouble on the high seas
52 A furious rivalry between NYC's World & Journal papers in the 1890s led to this term used for sensational news reporting
53 At the decisive Battle of Hastings the Normans had many more bowmen than the English & one of them may have hit this king in the eye
54 Temperamental & capricious coinage metal
55 (Sarah of the Clue Crew shows map imagery of the Moon on the monitor.) Possibly caused by magnetized lava under the Moon's surface lunar swirls are easy to spot because of a high one of these
56 This C in the ABC Islands of the Caribbean has the oldest continuously inhabited Jewish community in the Americas
57 The entire cast of this 1944 Hitchcock drama was 9 stars & an uncredited German sailor adrift in the title conveyance
58 Begun in 1764 this Hartford Connecticut Journal is the oldest continuously published newspaper in the USA
59 The Normans brought the custom of inherited these like Charpentier; they weren't common in pre-conquest England
60 A priory for a bivalve

About

"Jeopardy!" is a classic game show -- with a twist. The answers are given first, and the contestants supply the questions. Three contestants, including the previous show's champion, compete in six categories and in three rounds (with each round's "answers" being worth more prize money). In the third round, "Final Jeopardy," the contestants can name their own jackpot -- as long as it's within the amount of money they've already earned. If a player finishes the second round with zero dollars, they are eliminated from "Final Jeopardy." The first version of "Jeopardy!," which aired from 1964 to 1975 on NBC, was hosted by Art Fleming. Alex Trebek is the current host; he began with the program in 1984 (at the start of its syndicated run).

Latest Questions

# Questions
1 Of the 15 countries formed by the collapse of the soviet union in 1991 this one is alphabetically last
2 Time mentioned “cruelty & enforced conformity” when summing up this novel with a “stormly silent narrator”
3 First appearing in an English dictionary in 1623 mesonoxian means pertaining to this word
4 In his “Natural History” Pliny described it as “Argentum Vivum”
5 Captured in Egypt by the British Army 1801 is painted on the side of this artifact named for the city where it was found
6 The brown hyena & the bat-eared fox both make their home in this largest desert of southern Africa
7 An analogy: Claude Debussy is to Impressionism as this Gymnopédies composer is to Surrealism
8 It comes before voce to mean quietly & before il sole della Toscana to mean the book Under the Tuscan Sun
9 Among the class of 2024 this civil rights icon who at age 6 made history when she integrated one of New Orleans all white schools
10 Ben Kingsley got an Oscar nomination for playing an Iranian immigrant with dreams of home ownership in this drama
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