YOU'VE GOT A "TUDE", MISTER
EUROPEAN HISTORY
MOVIES BY CHARACTER
POETIC LICENSE
MUSIC APPRECIATION
200
'Yours right now is approximately 74 degrees west'
longitude
200
'In 1536 King Christian III established this protestant denomination as Denmark's state religion'
Lutheranism
200
'Michigan detective Axel Foley, California detective Billy Rosewood'
Beverly Hills Cop
200
'Britannica suggests that the out-of-wedlock children fathered by this "Good Gray Poet" were imaginary'
Walt Whitman
200
'Italian for "half", this prefix often precedes forte & soprano'
mezzo
400
'In 1994 the A in SAT was changed from this to "assessment"'
aptitude
400
'When this country gained independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, Greece objected to its name & flag'
Macedonia
400
'Jeanne & Paul (who don't know each other's names) & a French apartment'
Last Tango in Paris
400
'The 2001 biography "Savage Beauty" details the lustful life of this "What Lips My Lips Have Kissed" poet'
Edna St. Vincent Millay
400
'The name of this old French dance follows "Ascot" in the title of a song from "My Fair Lady"'
gavotte
600
'The state of being alone or isolated'
solitude
600
'In WWI Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria & the Ottoman Empire were known in the West as these "Powers"'
the Central
600
'In a 1959 film, Altair, Aldebaran, Antares & Rigel (total legs: 16)'
Ben Hur
600
'A rural legend says he wrote a nasty ballad about Sir Thomas Lucy after being caught poaching on Lucy's land'
William Shakespeare
600
'He composed "Karelia" as a tribute to the Finnish province of the same name'
Sibelius
800
'King Lear speaks of "filial" this, which caused him grief'
ingratitude
800
'In 59 B.C. Julius Caesar established a colony on the Arno River which later became this Italian city'
Florence
800
'Defendants Ernst Janning & Friedrich Hofstetter'
Judgment at Nuremberg
800
'One week after a secret wedding at St. Marylebone Church, she ran off to Italy, escaping Wimpole Street forever'
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
800
'The name of this small harpsichord may come from the Latin for "rod" or the Latin for "maiden"'
virginal
1000
'From the Latin for "vile", this term often follows "moral"'
turpitude
1000
'In 1589 Henry of this kingdom became Henry IV of France & began the Royal Bourbon dynasty'
Navarre
1000
'Lyle, Tector & Pike, who says, "If they move... kill 'em"'
The Wild Bunch
1000
'Leigh Hunt was imprisoned in 1823 for literary attacks against the prince regent, who later became this king'
George IV
1000
'The film "Gosford Park" features several songs by this British actor & composer who's a character in the movie'
Ivor Novello