Jeopardy June 15 2022 Answers
Below you may find all the Jeopardy June 15 2022 Answers. If you missed the show already and want to see the solutions for today’s questions then you have come to the right place. In order for you to find easier what you are looking for, I have integrated below a search so use it to filter the results you are looking for! For older Jeopardy questions and answers I recommend visiting the archive page
Jeopardy June 15 2022 Answers
- (Mike Strehlow of the CBS58 news team presents the clue.) Years that end in 3 & 8 bring out big celebrations of this company; in 2018 its 115th birthday bash had 6500 riders roaring down Wisconsin Avenue
- Nasus
- In 1973 North Carolina went green in naming this as the official state precious stone
- In 2017 he released his first book The TB12 Method: How to Achieve a Lifetime of Sustained Peak Performance
- Head coaches of this mile high football team have included John Fox & Gary Kubiak
- Psalm 23 refers to one of these that runneth over so stop pouring already
- (Mike Curkov of the CBS58 news team presents the clue.) In 1969 Milwaukee Bucks management was excited to introduce this new player who soon led the team to its first championship; he lived in an apartment in Juno Village with a specially raised doorframe
- Pulmo
- Teddy Roosevelt cited what he described as a West African proverb: do this & carry a big stick; you will go far
- '80s & '90s Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady dealt with the crisis & bailout of failing S&Ls short for these institutions
- Larry Bird once coached this NBA team whose nickname was chosen to refer to horse racing & car racing
- If the audience is packed like these little herring relatives the venue is pretty full
- (Nicole Koglin of the CBS58 news team presents the clue.) It's not as big as Comic-Con but thousands attend Gary Con in Lake Geneva Wisconsin where Gary Gygax invented this pioneering role-playing game; you can get your dice blessed near the Riviera Fountain
- Bracchium
- Hickory is the traditional material for making these sporting sticks with a net at one end
- In the late 1890s its territorial gov. John Green Brady called for statehood; he died in Sitka before it happened
- This Notre Dame quartet was coached by Knute Rockne
- At the theater SRO is short for this
- (Amanda Porterfield of the CBS58 news team presents the clue.) Milwaukee's German heritage is celebrated with a summertime festival along Lake Michigan or more quietly with monuments all over the city like the one to Schiller & this friend & fellow German romantic writer
- Auris
- The stone weighs between 38 & 44 pounds in this sport
- For his PBS Civil War documentary Ken Burns relied on this man's photographs
- Coaches at Kentucky State in this state capital may want to explain why their team nickname is spelled Thorobreds
- Your place is really full if you're packed to these exposed beams in the ceiling
- (Natalie Shepherd of the CBS58 news team presents the clue.) The Milwaukee Art Museum now has wings designed by geniuses from both ends of Europe; in 2001 a new pavilion with a removable sunscreen designed by Spain's Santiago Calatrava joined the original building by this modernist from Finland
- Genu (as in genuflect)
- In 1950 this 336-pound object was stolen by Scottish nationalists on Christmas but it was recovered a few months later
- When the 1993 bill named for him became law it instituted background checks for gun purchases
- Don Nelson coached Dirk Nowitzki & the rest of this NBA team when its uniform logo went horsey in 2001
- Past tense for eat is spelled out in this word that means I couldn't eat another bite
- Missionary work by Bishop Palladius & this saint succeeded in converting Ireland to Christianity
- This African country is home to Tobruk Tripoli & the oasis town of Tazirbu
- This character lost his parents in a boating accident & was adopted by Bilbo
- The sabal this Florida's state tree has a heart that tastes like cabbage
- Folks guard against these mindless monsters on Black Summer
- A heavy dairy product beaten until it's stiff
- This branch of the goths migrated to the Iberian Peninsula & gained domination over it
- To make the national government more accessible to all Nigerians in 1991 Abuja replaced this city as Nigeria's capital
- This Beverly Cleary girl has a mom & dad; Helen Hunt Jackson's 1884 character of the same name does not
- Also known as the ground laurel it has been Massachusetts' state flower since 1918 not 1620
- Return of the Killer Catfish & Mekong Mutilator were episodes of this Animal Planet adventure show
- A memorable line from Dr. Strangelove: Gentlemen you can't fight in here! This is the ____ ____
- Containing the Mishnah & Gemara the Babylonian version of this vast compilation of Jewish law was compiled
- The Limpopo River between South Africa & Botswana is also known as this river after a large predator
- At the beginning of this Bronte novel this orphaned title character is sent to the Lowood Institution where she is mistreated
- California made the lace type of this fungus-alga partnership its official state one
- In a Christmas special narrated by Burl Ives this title animal meets an abominable snow monster
- Type of glasses favored by John Lennon & the farmer in American Gothic
- This Christian patriarch & Bishop of Hippo wrote the philosophical treatise The City of God
- Massawa & Assab are important port cities of Eritrea on the shores of this long body of water
- Hawaii's state plant is kalo the local name for this root used to make poi
- The monster-hunting Winchester boys on this show tangled with demons & Rakshasa
- It's another name for tungsten
- This temple was founded in Henan China around 495 & became associated with Zen Buddhism & martial arts
- The Blue Nile & the White Nile join together just north of this capital city
- In this John Irving novel the eccentric Dr. Wilbur Larch runs an orphanage
- Known for living a long time one of Nevada's two state trees is this type of pine named for the feature seen here
- There were also vampires & werewolves on this Showtime series with characters like Dorian Gray & Victor Frankenstein
- The shape of an electromagnetic emission or of a gnarly breaker