Jeopardy October 10 2019 answers


On this page you will find the Jeopardy October 10 2019 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 This British captain sighted New Zealand in 1769 & accurately charted its coast
2 Gamblers know it's another name for blackjack--hit me!
3 Of Australia though it's the country's oldest city
4 1951: Hey Stella. Hey Stella
5 Pelicans may look uncomfortable but several of these bones are abnormally joined so their necks are far more flexible than ours
6 A horse walks into a bar is a typical start for one
7 In 2011 & 2015 the New Zealand All Blacks became the first team to win back-to-back world cups in this sport
8 In tennis if you have 2 points this is your score
9 Of Alaska though it has 9 times the capital's population
10 1996: Show me the money. Show me the money
11 The name for these circus performers suggests that they twist & flex themselves into all sorts of weird positions
12 urbandictionary.com caustically says this is being pretentious about how much you care about a social issue
13 This 1915 military campaign in Turkey is regarded as New Zealand's coming of age in international affairs
14 A quinceaƱera is a celebration of a girl's this number birthday
15 Of England though it's home to the country's most popular & successful pro sports team
16 2006: This is Sparta
17 A knee bent beyond its normal range has been this often seen on pro sports injury reports
18 Olly olly this device is made to keep your oxen from being free
19 In 1642 this guy with an Australian state named for him was the first European to sight New Zealand
20 This gasoline brand introduced its iconic orange ball in 1962
21 Of Germany since 1990
22 1995: What was in the box?... What's in the box?
23 Flex your arms thusly and you're doing this three-letter dance move
24 A close-fitting necklace or someone who gives away a big lead in a game
25 Greenpeace's Rainbow Warrior protest ship was sunk in this most populous New Zealand city's harbor in 1985
26 In Judaism the word chai represents life & is synonymous with this number used to signify good luck & a long life
27 Of Canada though it was incorporated in 1862 with a royal name
28 1973: The power of Christ compels you. The power of Christ compels you
29 You've got to flex in a very odd manner to perform this wooden craze of a few years ago
30 It means added fuel to a fire or elated pumped up
31 Time to barrel down the Raymond Gary Expressway named for the head of the Sooner Oil Co. & governor of this state
32 With cozy living quarters this style named for its dramatic shape has become a popular choice for vacation homes
33 We can train for life on Mars on this continent that best matches its temperature range
34 (Sarah of the Clue Crew at Texas Beeworks in Austin.) In the story His Last Bow this fictional character says of his retirement I live and keep bees upon the South Downs and shows Dr. Watson
35 The Ministry of Silly Walks was a sketch on this British troupe's comedy show
36 Julia Tuttle Causeway honors the Mother of this city of dolphins & deco
37 Named after an ancient ruler & his tomb it's a large building for above ground entombments
38 King Arthur's wizardly adviser
39 The Valles Marineris is a canyon system that's almost 5 times as deep as this one carved by the Colorado
40 He utters the parting words My dear I don't give a damn
41 This daytime host pioneered the audience participation talk show
42 Conland Highway on I-91 was named for a publisher of the Courant newspaper in this New England state capital
43 Cincinnati's Ingalls Building was the first high-rise made of reinforced this; in 1903 a reporter waited all night for it to fall down
44 Mimic mindlessly like a certain bird
45 This period right after sunset is longer on Mars because of high-altitude dust scattering the remaining sunlight
46 The title character of this Thomas Hardy novel has the last name Fawley & works as a stonemason
47 The Ponderosa was the name of the Nevada ranch where Ben Cartwright & his sons lived on this western
48 Taking you from Pennsylvania to New Jersey the Commodore Barry Bridge celebrates a Father of the American this force
49 Also a main building of an airport it's an installation at a harbor where oil or gas is stored
50 The ancients could count on it
51 Everyone remember where we parked--next to this NASA lander named for one who goes ahead to seek the way
52 12-year-old Frankie Addams wants to go with her brother & his new wife on their honeymoon in this Carson McCullers novel
53 9114 South Central Avenue in L.A. was the TV home of this title father & son's house & junkyard
54 You can take a swing by Yankee Stadium on the Major this Expressway named for a guy who helped build army bases in N.Y. during WWI
55 This word for a certain tall structure comes from the Arabic for lighthouse
56 Silver in heraldry
57 Keep your water supply handy--long straight surface lines thought to be systems of these proved to be a 19th century myth
58 Sydney Carton takes the place of this doomed French nobleman in A Tale of Two Cities
59 Telemundo's 1998 show Reyes y Rey was loosely based on this '70s cop show starring David Soul & Paul Michael Glaser

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 The first fossils of these creatures with an elongated 4th digit were described in 1784 by naturalist Cosimo Collini
2 He often posts about his BBC chat show & his GN wine
3 Cultural appropriation is at the heart of this novel by R.F. Kuang; a white woman steals a manuscript written by her Asian friend
4 In the early 60s this Greek-letter brand was a big deal with JFKs Slimline & Mercury astronaut Wally Schirras Speedmaster
5 To us this Greek word means excess pride; to Aristotle it meant shaming others for ones own pleasure (perhaps out of pride)
6 In Doctor Faustus Christopher Marlowe uses this name for Troy
7 This Asian capital has been called the Venice of the East though most of the smaller khlongs or canals have been filled in
8 The official account of her dance company posted a video of her dancing in Appalachian Spring in 1947
9 Tea Cake is Janie Crawfords third husband in this classic by Zora Neale Hurston
10 A victim of sexist obscuritv this kind of timepiece stands between 5 & 6 tall like one appraised on Antiques Roadshow in 2012
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