Clue | FF Word |
Homer Simpson's beer or Lizzie McGuire actress | |
Who's funnier - David Brent or Michael Scott? Watch the UK and US versions of this show to decide | |
Big Bird's woolly mammoth buddy | |
Challenging, like an expert's crossword puzzle or mountainous terrain | |
Coffee has double f's; so does its key ingredient for us non-morning people | |
Steven Soderbergh award winning film or Los Angeles gridlock | |
A runny nose may cause a person to do this tiny snort, to others' annoyance | |
You can shuffle off to this city which is famous for Wings and Bills | |
Urban legend has it that this Teamster leader's body is buried under New Jersey's Giants Stadium | |
This president's Washington D.C. Memorial is popular with tourists, but not as popular as Lincoln's | |
The founder of Singapore; his surname is the same as a word for prize draws | |
Portrayor of Jon (J.D.) Dorian on Scrubs | |
These large-beaked birds of the auk family come in Atlantic, Horned or Tufted species | |
Someone who has a permanent address at the Bone Orchard would probably be found in this type of box | |
You can do this to a turkey, a ballot box or your face | |
| Clue | FF Word |
Bubbly; 'Lachrymose is to dyspeptic as ebullient is to...' | |
From Harry Potter: a Hogwarts House | |
It can be an automobile part or a scarf | |
Character played by Ken on 'Dallas', John on 'Cheers' and Bill on 'The Cosby Show' | |
Outwardly displaying feelings of love and tenderness | |
Airy and soft, having the feel of light down or fuzz | |
To drink a hearty draft | |
The start of every ice hockey game, or a John Travolta movie | |
To scrape with the feet, or a mark left by light abrasion | |
Corpulent knight who appears in three Shakespeare plays | |
Popcorn brand with a name that alludes to its quick cooking time | |
This spice, made from crocus stigmas, is one of the most expensive in the world | |
Disreputable, low-class group of people, or one of Underdog's cartoon foes | |
French fungal delicacy, traditionally dug up by pigs | |
Electrician in charge of lighting in film and television or, in Britain, a boss | |
Taking a position of authority too seriously, to the point of obnoxiousness | |
'Gobbledegook, confusing or generally unintelligible jargon' - most despised word in Sporcle history? | |
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