It's All From the Greek to Me
Music Class
Rhyme Time
Who's Your Mommy?
You're Such an Idiom!
100

From the Greek for "without a name", it's one way to make a charitable contribution

anonymously

100

It's this type of note shown here

eighth note

100

A yearly instruction book

annual manual

100

Hamlet

Queen Gertrude

100

"Barking up" this originated with hunting; a dog would sometimes make a mistake locating its prey

"the wrong tree"
200

An institution for the care of the mentally ill, it's from the Greek for "sanctuary"

asylum

200

The letter f seen here stands for forte, or "to play loudly", but double f stands for this, or to "play very loudly"

fortissimo

200

The labor performed by an office filer

clerk work

200

King Solomon

Bathsheba

200

Said too much? Revealed a secret that you didn't mean to? You've had a "slip of" this

"the tongue"

300

It's the optical instrument whose name is from the Greek for "small view"

microscope

300

[DD]

This large woodwind can play very low notes & its name comes from the Italian for "very low"

the bassoon

300

The invoice for one's prescription tablets

pill bill

300

Invention (proverbially)

necessity

300

An auto mechanic is popularly referred to as this kind of primate

"a grease monkey"
400

From the Greek for "acid former", this gas is the most abundant element in the earth's crust

oxygen

400

Music notes in the spaces between the lines of a staff are these four notes; best remembered by an simple acronym

"F" "A" "C" "E"

400

The kidnapping of builders and their tools from their work site

construction abduction

400

Hera (this is an anagram)

Rhea

400

[DD]

To be rowdy or make trouble is to do this, referring to Abel's brother

"Raising Cain"
500

From the Greek for "split mind", this mental illness often interferes with a person's ability to manage emotions

schizophrenia

500

On sheet music, dots above or below the notes indicate that the note should be played like this, separate and quickly; Italian for "detached"

staccato

500

Almost every 365 days

nearly yearly

500
Caesarion

Cleopatra

500

It describes a small, out-of-the-way-place, or an aperture in Hadrian's famous structure

"a hole in the wall"