Sweet Tooth
Sporting Events
Animals
Popular Hymns
Holidays
200

This peanut butter containing candy in a cup, which is highly consumed today was originally a fail

Reese's Peanut Butter Cups

200

This famous ice skater and boxer was banned from competing for the United States because she paid someone to hurt her competitor

Tonya Harding

200

These animals, which could only live in extremely cold climates, spend half their life in the ocean and the other half on land

Penguins

200

This hymn, which has a name in the title, was written to illustrate a sermon on New Year's Day of 1773

Amazing Grace

200

This holiday celebrates Pilgrims having the first Thanksgiving with the Indians

Thanksgiving

400

This candy, which comes in a multitude of colors, is round with hard chocolate covering a soft chocolate middle, whose name is an abbreviation for Mars and Murrie

M & M's

400

This football player, known by many as one of the best football players, is famous for helping his team win seven Super Bowls

Tom Brady

400

These enormous elephant-like animals are extremely territorial in the water but not while grazing on land (in Africa)

hippos

400

This hymn was written by Boberg, who wrote it after walking home from a church near Kronobäck, Sweden, and listening to church bells. This hymn is known for the line "how great..."

How Great Thou Art

400

Irish immigrants brought this spooky holiday to the US in the 1840s

Halloween

600

This triangular-shaped chocolate candy's name was named after the sound and the motion that the machine made when it deposited the chocolate onto the conveyer belt 

Hershey Kisses

600

Known for his skills as a batter and numerous amount of home runs, the name for this Baltimore baseball player is 

Babe Ruth

600

These snakes rear up and spread their necks when they are disturbed or threatened

Cobras

600

Also known as "I, the Lord of Sea and Sky" after its opening line, this is a Christian hymn written by the American composer of Catholic liturgical music Dan Schutte in 1979 and published in 1981

Here I Am Lord

600

This holiday purpose is to honor the nation’s working people

Labor Day

800

This very popular southern Asian candy, which usually comes in red or black and is twisted, gets its name from the herbaceous shrub 

licorice candy

800

This basketball player led the Chicago Bulls to six National Basketball Association (NBA) championships and was named the NBA's Most Valuable Player (MVP) five times

Michael Jordan

800

This animal, with its long limbs, has to splay its front legs so that it can drink water safely

giraffe

800

This morning hymn was first published in 1931. It has words by English author Eleanor Farjeon and was inspired by the village of Alfriston in East Sussex, then set to a traditional Scottish Gaelic tune, "Bunessan." 

Morning Has Broken

800

Cupid, in Roman mythology, is the character and the son of Venus who pops up often on this holiday


Valentine's Day

1000

This candy, with its original color containing cherry (pink), lime (blue) and lemon (yellow), is in the shape of little dots

Candy Buttons

1000

This man was one of the greatest boxers in history, the first fighter to win the world heavyweight championship on three separate occasions

Muhammad Ali

1000

These animals sleep upside down suspended by their tails

possums

1000

This famous hymn is a devotional Hymn composed by Michael Joncas that has a chorus "And He will raise you up..."

On Eagle's Wings

1000

This is a traditional Chinese holiday that occurs on the fifth day of the fifth month of the Chinese calendar and is celebrated by people rowing their boats together in teams

The Dragon Boat Festival

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