Jumbo General April 29, 2023 Answers
Welcome on our Website! In this website we post daily answers and solutions for The Independent Jumbo General Crosswords. Below is the list of clues and answers for The Independent Jumbo General April 29, 2023.
Description: SPOT THE CONNECTION What connects 11 Across, 35 Across and 55 Across? Connection from #721 Princess Caroline, Jamie Lee Curtis and Melanie Griffith are daughters of women who starred in Hitchcock films
Clicking on the crossword clue will open a page with clue answer.
Crossword GK Jumbo 722 by Eimi posted on Saturday, April 29, 2023
Across Clues
- “Trois esquisses symphoniques pour orchestre” by French composer Claude Debussy
- The longest river in the Republic of Ireland
- 2004 single by Stereophonics that reached number 5 in the UK
- 2003 Farrelly brothers film starring Matt Damon and Greg Kinnear as conjoined twins
- Popular song written by Noel Gay and Ralph Butler in 1939 for the show The Little Dog Laughed
- Fictional scorer in the radio comedy panel game I’m Sorry I Haven’t a Clue
- The Muslim name for God
- Famous aria from the opera Carmen by Georges Bizet sometimes referred to as L’amour est un oiseau rebelle
- Camera brand, the first of which was built by Oskar Barnack in 1913
- Open-source computer operating system first released in 1991
- John D Loudermilk song that was a hit for The Everly Brothers in 1961
- A Hungarian dance in two movements, one slow and the other fast
- See 34
- Nymph who brought up the infant Zeus on goat’s milk
- English composer whose works include A Sea Symphony, A London Symphony and A Pastoral Symphony
- An intricate multicoloured pattern knitted with Shetland wool
- Iron salt used in inks, tanning, water purification, and in the treatment of anaemia
- The capital of Northern Ireland
- Fraction equal to 40%
- The second largest US state
- American band who had a 1978 hit with Kiss You All Over
- Latin hymn of the 13th century, describing the Last Judgment
- 1963 play by Bill Naughton filmed in 1966 and 2004
- A measure of processing speed, consisting of a million floating-point operations a second
- London Underground station on the Northern Line, between Goodge Street and Euston, and the Victoria Line, between Oxford Circus and Euston
- Welsh poet whose poetry collections include After Every Green Thing and Running Late
- Cape on the SW coast of Spain that was the scene of a decisive naval battle in 1805 in which Nelson was mortally wounded
- See 8 Down
- Suburb of Liverpool that is home to John Lennon Airport
Down Clues
- Home of the platoon led by Captain Square in Dad’s Army
- Kingdom centred on the valley of the River Trent from approx 527-900AD whose capital was Tamworth
- The pupal stage of butterflies
- Name given to any book printed before 1500
- Plant of the genus Rumex with acid-tasting leaves used in salads and sauces
- Author of A Tale of a Tub and Gulliver’s Travels
- African country whose capital is Harare
- American actor who married Demi Moore in 2005
- Pilot’s only number one single in the UK, topping the charts for three weeks in February 1975
- The main vessel in the arterial network
- 1957 novel by Nevil Shute
- A vector graphics editor developed and marketed by a Canadian corporation that was initially released in 1989
- Actress who played Dr Nikki Alexander in the BBC crime drama Silent Witness
- Town in Bavaria that was the site of a Nazi concentration camp
- See 28
- British writer best known for the 1859 didactic work Self-Help
- The Australian cockatoo Kakatoe roseicapilla
- Dutch city that was home to the Pilgrim Fathers for 11 years before they sailed for America in 1620
- Mountainous plateau region occupying about one sixth of France
- Activist who stood in the US Presidential Elections four times between 1996 and 2008
- 1982 film starring Paul Newman, Charlotte Rampling, Jack Warden, James Mason and Milo O’Shea
- Part of the Pacific between Australia and New Zealand
- Technical name for a boil
- Japanese physicist who shared the 1973 Nobel Prize in Physics with Ivar Giaever and Brian David Josephson
- Francisco ___, Spanish conqueror of Peru who murdered the Inca King Atahualpa and founded Lima as the new capital
- Name for will-o’-the-wisp that literally means “foolish fire”
- Play exploring the conflict between capital and labour written by John Galsworthy in 1909
- See 46
- Drink consisting of liqueur poured over crushed ice