One T, Double T
The Last Time I Saw England
Body Language
Same First and Last Letter
They Come In Pairs
100

I'm gonna tell! It means to turn informer or let out secrets

Tattle

100

This Beatle left Heathrow Airport August 13, 1971, never to return

John Lennon

100

"Get off on the wrong ____"

Foot

100

24 hours earlier

Yesterday

100

Isotoner says you can keep warm while texting with its SmarTouch pairs of these

Gloves

200

French word for proper conduct in a social setting

Etiquette

200

Its passengers had a last look at England September 16, 1620

The Mayflower

200

"Keep a stiff upper ____"

Lip

200

In radio communication, "message received & understood"

Roger

200

2 stars that are close together & orbit around a common center are called a double star or this other 6-letter type

Binary Star

300

This word can precede "step" to mean a hesitation that fakes out a defender, or repetitive sounds

This word can precede "step" to mean a hesitation that fakes out a defender

300

In Ford Madox Brown's "The Last of England", 19th century emigrants leave this landmark, receding behind them

The Cliffs of Dover

300

"____ room" or "____ grease"

Elbow

300

According to a proverb, it's "the best teacher"

Experience

300

They're often found in the hands of a flamenco dancer

Castanets

400

Last name of Vernon & Josiah--they were a pear, so to speak

Bartlett

400

He left England for the Continent in 1816, settled in Italy & wrote "Don Juan" before dying in Greece in 1824

Lord Byron

400

"____ of contention"

Bone

400

It's the Japanese name for Japan

Nippon

400

Kill Devil Hills in North Carolina is the site of a large monument dedicated to this pair

Orville and Wilbur Wright

500

To reply & offset an enemy's hostile move

Counterattack

500

He saw the last of England through one eye in September 1805, did his duty & died victorious at sea in October

Lord Nelson

500

"Gird one's ____"

Loins

500

In 2017 Monopoly gave the boot to the boot, the thimble & this contraption designed to move outdoor loads

Wheelbarrow

500

In an Edward Lear poem, this pair "dined on mince, and slices of quince, which they ate with a runcible spoon"

The Owl and the Pussycat

M
e
n
u