This English singer-songwriter was probably best known for her final album, Back to Black.
Amy Winehouse
She’s the longest-reigning monarch in British history.
Queen Elizabeth II
Capable of going from 0-60 MPH in less than three seconds, it's considered the fastest land animal.
Cheetah
You'd consider this a baker's dozen.
13
A true landmark, this gas station's sign is visible from Fenway.
Citgo
He's the father of Ron, Ginny, George, Fred, Bill, and Charlie.
Arthur Weasley
She's the newest royal, named in honor of her grandmother.
Lilibet
He is widely considered to be the greatest sprinter of all time.
Usain Bolt
Baklava is typically made with this kind of pastry dough.
Filo
The biggest art heist in history occured here, over St. Patrick's Day weekend.
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
She’s rumored to have inspired the character of Miranda Priestly from The Devil Wears Prada.
Anna Wintour
Will & Kate met at this university, the oldest in Scotland.
University of St. Andrews
This gold-medal favorite in the women’s 100 meters was recently suspended from the Tokyo Olympics.
Sha’Carri Richardson
Add this to milk, and you'll get buttermilk.
Lemon
This band’s first apartment was in Allston, where they lived from 1970-1972.
Aerosmith
She played the villain in Get Out—quite the contrast from her character in Girls.
Allison Williams
Queen Elizabeth II famously owns all of these-- a certain type of animal-- in the River Thames.
Swans
Runners who wear this color are more likely to win a race.
Red
Frangipane boasts this as its main ingredient.
Almonds
In 1919, a storage tank holding this substance burst and flooded the city, killing 21 people.
Molasses
A discredited academic, he falsely claimed that there was a link between the MMR vaccine and autism.
Andrew Wakefield
This royal is also an Olympian and has a silver medal to prove it.
Zara (Phillips) Tindall
He's the only POTUS to have run a marathon.
George W. Bush
This checkered sponge cake is held together with jam and covered in marzipan.
Battenberg cake
He signed his first published work, Tamerlane, as “a Bostonian.”
Edgar Allen Poe