OXYMORONS
SAY CHEESE!
FROM THE ITALIAN
BAD ENGLISH
OOH, LOOK, SHINY THINGS!
CURRENCY
400

Alliterative expression of dismay favored by "Peanuts" characters

good grief

400

This cheese usually aged & grated is named for the "Eternal City"

Romano

400

Italian for "unknown", it's how you travel when you don't want to be recognized

incognito

400

The clue I am reading had an example of a shift in this

tense

400

In song, he "had a very shiny nose... you would even say it glows"

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer

400

It's said this currency of India goes back to a silver coin introduced by Sher Shah in 1542

the rupee

800

1980 Travolta movie about mechanical bulls & bravery

Urban Cowboy

800

Edam is made in a ball; this other Dutch cheese is made in wheels with a waxed red or yellow rind

Gouda

800

Tossed at New Year's, it has a name meaning "sweetmeats", the little candies tossed during carnival

confetti

***

800

Its the typographical mark that is missing in the first line of this clue.

the apostrophe

800

Referring to its rapid movement & shiny surface, quicksilver is an old name for this liquid metal

mercury

800

Add a letter to the Angola currency & it becomes this December Pan-African holiday

Kwanzaa

1200

A substitute master of ceremonies for a TV talk show

guest host

1200

Herman & Lily know that this oft-imitated cheese shares its name with the Alsace valley where it originated

Muenster

1200

These quick appearances by guest stars in films can carve out a little comic "relief"

a cameo

1200

In a sentence, this noun & its verb has--excuse me, have to agree in number

the subject

1200

By making them durable, Herbert Lieberman was the Henry Ford of these shiny discs, seen on skates & Michael Jackson

sequins

1200

In a symbol for Japanese currency, parallel bars adorn this letter

a Y

1600

It's the oxymoronic name for the comparatively small instrument seen here

a baby grand

1600

***DAILY DOUBLE***

Danbo, a cheese originally from this country, is also known as King Christian IX when made with caraway seeds

Denmark

1600

Ben Jonson's 1598 comedy "Every Man in His Humour" uses this Italian term for a brothel

a bordello

1600

Flout, meaning "to show scorn for", is often confused with this word meaning "to show off"

flaunt

1600

***DAILY DOUBLE***

These artificial gems are named for a river that begins in the Alps & flows through Germany

rhinestones

1600

The front of a 2015 Argentine 50 peso note features a map of these islands

the Falklands

2000

"People talking without speaking" is from this Simon & Garfunkel song

"The Sound Of Silence"

2000

This Swiss cheese that dates back to the 12th century is named for a valley in the Canton of Fribourg

Gruyère

***

2000

Somewhere along the line this instrument's name lost its big finish of "forte"

piano

2000

8-letter term for a "sentence" error. Found in the present clue.

a fragment

***

2000

Small bits of pyrite in this alliterative blue rock give the appearance of gold specks

lapis lazuli


2000

Curacao uses the Netherlands Antillean this, the name of the old Dutch currency

a guilder

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