CLUES TO SECRET IDENTITIES
(Alex: ...of superheroes.)
SAME FIRST & LAST LETTER
"CEL"EBRITY WORDS
RHYME SCENE INVESTIGATION
WORD & PHRASE ORIGINS
100

Superman:

A county in southeastern England

Kent

100

Food bought in a restaurant to be eaten at home

Takeout 

100

The basement, or last place in the standings of a sports league

Cellar

100

Poe rhymed, "Thy naiad airs have brought me home / To the glory that was Greece / And the grandeur that was" this

Rome

100

This 2-word term for 8 specific colleges in the east refers to the vegetation covering their older buildings

Ivy League

200

Spider-Man:

Follows "valet" in a job outside L.A. restaurants

Parker

200

The most populous city in Poland

Warsaw 

200

These fatty deposits cause a dimpled appearance around the hips & thighs

Cellulite 

200

Duran Duran sang, "Her name is Rio & she dances on the sand... Oh Rio, Rio, dance across" this 2-word Texas river

Rio Grande

200

The name of this mass of ice comes from the Old French for "ice"

Glacier

300

Batman:

Detroit is its county seat

Wayne

300

A change of job within a company that's not a promotion or demotion is this kind of side-to-side move

Lateral

300

This clear wrap used to package food was developed from a failed attempt to invent stain-proof tablecloths

Cellophane 

300

"See the pyramids along the Nile, see the sunrise on" this

Tropic isle

300

This word for a long-noosed rope used to catch cattle & horses is from the Spanish la reata, "the rope"

Lariat

400

The Hulk:

A flag unfurled

Banner

400

A 4-letter U.S. state (remember the category!)

Ohio

400

This temperature scale has 100 units between the freezing point & the boiling point of water

Celsius 

400

Springsteen said to "Put your make-up on, fix your hair up pretty and meet me tonight" in this N.J. gambling town

Atlantic City

400

A 15th century sailor is said to have given this snake its name, from a Portuguese phrase meaning "hooded snake"

Cobra

500

Aquaman:

Pungent dish of India or the powdery spice that flavors it

Curry

500

Someone who owns a big cattle farm

Rancher

500

Originally this word meant "unmarried"; its other meaning is a more recent development

Celibate 

500

Ogden Nash started a limerick, "There was an old man of" this city in India "who coated his tonsils with butta"

Calcutta 

500

The first written use of the phrase "stuffed shirt", meaning a pompous bore, occurred in her 1913 novel "O Pioneers!"

(Willa) Cather