This 19th c. composer's Mazurka No. 9 (Op. 7 No. 5) is one of the peppier ones

Below you will find the solution for: This 19th c. composer's Mazurka No. 9 (Op. 7 No. 5) is one of the peppier ones Jeopardy .

This 19th c. composer's Mazurka No. 9 (Op. 7 No. 5) is one of the peppier ones Jeopardy

Possible Solution: CHOPIN

Since you already solved the question This 19th c. composer's Mazurka No. 9 (Op. 7 No. 5) is one of the peppier ones which had the answer CHOPIN, you can simply go back at the main post to check the other answers. You can do so by clicking the link here Jeopardy October 04 2023


Related Questions

# Questions
1 His 1904 will stipulated that all the sums hereinbefore specified for prizes shall be used for prizes only
2 In a mining lode the gangue is the junk & this is the mineral with the good stuff in it
3 A Feb. 2023 headline said this movie about one seriously hopped-up ursine snorts up $23 million opening weekend
4 Gender-neutral baby names are on the rise especially this one of Mr. Lautner or Ms. Swift
5 Joseph Karl Stieler's early 19th century portrait of this man captures his energy & ferocity
6 Bill Gates' Xanadu 2.0
7 The kind of chatter some have the gift of & a sack that might hold a gift
8 This temperature oscillation in the equatorial Pacific Ocean was also a nickname of the young Rafael Nadal
9 Wocka wocka! To voice this Muppet Frank Oz said I had to flesh him out so I made him desperately insecure
10 In the 1970s baseball players & owners began to use a neutral 3rd person to resolve salary disputes in binding this
11 He's the former stockbroker who painted women of Tahiti seen here
12 James Madison's Montpelier
13 A navigator's charts & unwanted inbox messages
14 It's not just oil--Saudi Arabia has reserves of over 300 trillion cubic feet of this
15 Movie within a movie time! In The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent Nic Cage & Pedro Pascal swoon over this Brit-based bear 2
16 Soon after a beating by France at Marignano in 1515 this country decided expansion was out & neutrality was in
17 Dali's Persistence of Memory features 3 of these objects appearing to wilt
18 W.K. Kellogg Manor House
19 Your best buddies & an open hand smack to the face
20 Seismographers use the difference in speed between P waves & S waves to help locate this point
21 This man as Jackie Moon after a stunt on the court with a bear goes awry in Semi-Pro: If you have a small child use it as a shield!
22 Lucky for you when it comes to acids & bases this pH number is neutral
23 She's the American-born expatriate whose work is seen here
24 The Biltmore Estate on 8000 acres
25 Ceramic vessels & a save made by a goalie
26 Some ocean sediment is radiolarian ooze made of these parts of tiny protozoans
27 Phil Harris provided the bear necessities as this character in 1967's The Jungle Book
28 In 1927 he did not go to a neutral corner after knocking down Gene Tunney who may have gotten a 14-second long count
29 The unique modern stylings of this abstract Dutchman are seen in his Broadway Boogie Woogie
30 The Asa Packer Mansion home of the railroad magnate & founder of Lehigh University
31 Money for the return of something lost & a compartment in a cabinet to keep it in
32 Cirrhosis
33 His diary for July 14 1789 the day the Bastille was stormed read Rien meaning nothing
34 This philosopher & partner of Engels took up residence in London after being expelled from Prussia in 1849
35 To selfishly take more than one's share especially of the road
36 In Hare Tonic he hopes to make wabbit stew fwom that twickster Bugs Bunny
37 The cheerful tune you're hearing is this composer's overture to H.M.S. Pinafore
38 Rhinitis
39 On March 7 1774 George III complained of outrageous proceedings at this city especially in its harbor
40 Seen here the death of this Athenian philosopher was immortalized by Jacques Louis David in 1787
41 To live off the expenses of others giving nothing in return
42 In Buccaneer Bunny he calls himself the blood-thirstiest shoot-'em firstiest doggone worstiest
43 The Liberty Bell March by John Philip Sousa became this comedy troupe's theme song
44 Silicosis
45 As quoted in Die Hard when this ancient guy saw the breadth of his domain he wept for there were no more worlds to conquer
46 This 17th century French philosopher & mathematician accepted Queen Christina's refuge in Sweden & died there
47 To crash into with great force as when battering down a door
48 An anvil rocket skates & a do-it-yourself tornado kit are items Wile E. Coyote has bought from this corporation
49 This ode by Friedrich von Schiller is set to music in Beethoven's Ninth Symphony
50 Glossitis
51 The work seen here depicts this Trojan king pleading with Achilles to return his son's body
52 In Metaphysics of Morals this 18th c. man wrote that one who makes himself a worm can't complain if he's stepped on
53 To deceive or trick
54 I say he got above-the-title billing in the punningly named of rice and hen
55 This composer also known for ballets composed a merry waltz for his opera Eugene Onegin
56 Ménière's disease
57 In this event that brought Mussolini to power King Victor Emmanuel III refused to bring in the army to stop him
58 This philosopher's foundation convened an international war crimes tribunal to publicize U.S. atrocities in Vietnam
59 To hum buzz or speak in a monotonous tone
60 In Hare-Way to the Stars he informs Bugs that he's going to blow up the Earth because it obstructs his view of Venus


<- Previous Level All October 04 2023 answers Next Level ->

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 Turned into a Nazi headquarters in 1933 the nightspot Eldorado is said to have inspired this fictional place
2 Physicist John Wheeler said he coined this term as a faster way to say completely collapsed objects
3 A 1927 N.Y. Times Headline: Witness Testifies this woman rewrote play and insisted on the spicy scenes because city liked them
4 Blood will have blood says this title character who is later told be bloody bold & resolute
5 In a state of shock on Nov. 27 1978 she announced that both Mayor Moscone & Supervisor Harvey Milk have been shot & killed
6 Named for a Spanish Queen this Pacific Island chain was a starting point for famous explorations of 1960 & 2012
7 Frank Sinatra got upset that a photo of him caught fire in a Brooklyn pizzeria in this film
8 A 1976 report initiated by Admiral Rickover found it was an internal not external explosion that caused the destruction of this
9 A Sir since 2018 he contracted TB as a teen in 1953 & spent 8 years in a sanatorium where he learned to play the drums
10 Of the 15 countries formed by the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 this one is alphabetically last
JeopardyArchive.com is created by fans, for fans. The Jeopardy! game show and all elements thereof, including but not limited to copyright and trademark thereto, are the property of Jeopardy Productions, Inc. and are protected under law. This website is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or operated by Jeopardy Productions, Inc