| Clues | Answers |
| a widely known university town in England | |
| a mixture of various bite-size snack foods, such as nuts, raisins, and chocolates, typically served in a bowl at card games, parties, etc. | |
| an open deck above the main bridge of a vessel such as a yacht or cabin cruiser, typically equipped with duplicate controls | |
| a step or act that is regarded as being too drastic to take (or something that is very difficult to achieve) | |
| a 16th-century enclosed bridge in Venice between the Doges' Palace and the state prison, originally crossed by prisoners on their way to torture or execution | |
| the most populous city in the U.S. state of Connecticut | |
| a 1957-movie by David Lean with William Holden and Alec Guinness (Based on the novel of Pierre Boulle. About the construction of the Burma Railway during WWII.) | |
| another term for 'overhead crane' | |
| the capital city of Barbados | |
| a 1995-movie by Clint Eastwood with Meryl Streep (A photographer wanders into the life of a housewife for four days in the 1960s.) | |
| a historically notable problem in mathematics (its negative resolution by Leonhard Euler in 1735 laid the foundations of graph theory and prefigured the idea of topology) | |
| a laboratory device used, in chemistry, to connect the oxidation and reduction half-cells of a galvanic cell | |
| | Clues | Answers |
| a bridge where drivers or pedestrians must pay to cross | |
| a bridge across the Thames in London, famous for its twin towers and for the two bascules of which the roadway consists, able to be lifted to allow the passage of large ships | |
| one of the most internationally recognized symbols of San Francisco (California) | |
| dental bridges collectively | |
| a bridge, especially one over a castle’s moat, which is hinged at one end so that it may be raised to prevent people crossing or to allow vessels to pass under it | |
| somebody who takes care of the promotion of friendly relations between groups, communities, etc | |
| a bridge designed to be used by pedestrians | |
| a strong position secured by an army inside enemy territory from which to advance or attack | |
| containing the original content; not condensed (used of books, articles, and documents) | |
| the road bridge which spans the Pacific entrance to the Panama Canal (originally known as the Thatcher Ferry Bridge) | |
| a machine for weighing vehicles, set into the ground to be driven on to | |
| something that happened in the past and cannot now be changed | |
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