Independent Jumbo General Crossword GK Jumbo 515 By Eimi – May 04, 2019 Answers
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Description: SPOT THE CONNECTION What connects 23 Across, 37 Across and 56 Across? Connection from #514 Ray Noble, Steve Ovett and Katie Price were born in Brighton
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Crossword GK Jumbo 515 by Eimi posted on Saturday, May 04, 2019
Across Clues
- 1979 Francis Ford Coppola film based on Joseph Conrad's novella Heart of Darkness
- US state whose capital is Little Rock
- American group whose hit singles include Car Wash, Wishing on a Star and Love Don't Live Here Anymore
- Scottish rock band whose hit singles include Don't You (Forget About Me) and Alive and Kicking
- The third-largest moon of Neptune
- A tau cross with a loop on the top, symbolising eternal life, that often appeared in Egyptian personal names
- Colourless gas with a chlorine-like odour, formed by an electric discharge in oxygen
- Egyptian actor whose films include Doctor Zhivago, Funny Girl and Lawrence of Arabia
- Region of NW Italy whose chief town is Turin
- 1967 BBC adaptation of a series of John Galsworthy novels that starred Eric Porter, Kenneth More and Nyree Dawn Porter
- Country whose capital is Lima
- Film that won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film and the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1988
- Singer who performed in both the Opening and Closing ceremonies of the 2012 Olympics
- Golfer who won the Open Championship in 1985 and the US Masters in 1988
- See 14
- Radio programme first broadcast on 29 January 1942
- 1980s British comic whose strips included Weedy Willy and Tom Thug
- Title traditionally held by the eldest son of the reigning British monarch
- African republic on the Gulf of Aden whose capital has the same name
- American athlete who broke Bob Beamon's 23-year-old long jump world record by 5 cm at the 1991 World Championships in Tokyo
- The part of the small intestine between the jejunum and the caecum
- South African-born entertainer who played an Australian lodger in the BBC radio comedy series Hancock's Half Hour
- 8th century BC Greek poet who was the earliest author of didactic verse
- American actress best known for playing Major Margaret "Hot Lips" Houlihan in the TV series M*A*S*H
- See 50
- Flowering plant also known as sowbread
- 1955 film starring Michael Redgrave and Richard Todd, telling the story of Operation Chastise in World War II
Down Clues
- A thick creamy sauce made from egg yolks, oil and vinegar or lemon juice
- Austrian composer who wrote the oratorios The Creation and The Seasons
- Italian cyclist who won the Giro d'Italia five times and the Tour de France twice
- 2003 single by Evanescence that reached number 7 in both the UK and US charts
- British rider who won an individual show jumping silver medal at the 1972 Olympics
- US state whose capital is Topeka
- Robots or synthetic organisms designed to look and act like humans
- Italian region whose capital is Rome
- Mikaël ___, French defender who made 249 appearances for Manchester United before joining Arsenal in 2008
- ___ Ventham, English actress who is the mother of Benedict Cumberbatch
- 2004 film starring Clive Owen in the title role
- A saprotrophic basidiomycetous fungus with gills on the underside of the cap
- Scottish engine with the number 10 in Rev W Awdry's Railway Series
- Baroness ___, Hungarian-born British novelist best known for The Scarlet Pimpernel
- See 30 Across
- See 2
- 1970 Western starring John Wayne, the last film directed by Howard Hawks
- A person such as Madame Arcati in Noël Coward's play Blithe Spirit
- County of NW Republic of Ireland, on the Atlantic
- Synthetic material made by copolymerising dicarboxylic acids with diamines
- 1987 Richard Attenborough film based on books by journalist Donald Woods
- Faulty vision resulting from defective curvature of the cornea or lens of the eye
- Until 1959, the ruler of Tibet
- Baron Passfield, British economist, social historian and Fabian socialist who helped found the London School of Economics and the New Statesman
- A nontechnical name for urticaria
- Member of the Monty Python team who co-wrote the musical Spamalot with John Du Prez
- A bar fixed across the underpart of a wagon or carriage that has rounded ends on which the wheels revolve
- A kind of dark tea, grown in China, that is partly fermented before being dried
- Wading bird similar to a heron but usually with white plumage
- A Japanese wooden sword used for training
- African country whose capital is Nairobi