| The Times - Specialist - Sunday Times GK Jumbo No 235 |
| Clues | Answers |
| "Do you find you can't finish the ____ like you used to […]?" (Doc Morrissey in The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin) | CROSSWORD |
| 1979 comedy horror film in which Count Dracula is expelled from his castle by a communist government | Love At First Bite |
| 2006 DreamWorks film about hungry animals raiding food in suburbia | Over the Hedge |
| A Chinese tea made with partly fermented leaves | OOLONG |
| A group of travellers using 10Ds | CARAVAN |
| A not necessarily respectful name for an important person | WORTHY |
| An apparent bodily substance representing vigorous work | elbow grease |
| Australia's Test cricket captain, 1999-2004 | Steve Waugh |
| Australian arboreal marsupial, also called a phalanger | POSSUM |
| Avant-garde arts movement launched in Italy in 1909 | FUTURISM |
| BBC TV quiz show which included "dummy keyboard" and "hidden melody" rounds | Face the Music |
| Chansons de ____ are medieval verse romances about heroic deeds | GESTE |
| Dan Brown's fourth novel about Robert Langdon, which starts in Florence | INFERNO |
| David ____ won the 400m hurdles at the 1968 Olympics | hemery |
| Device accumulating electric charge on a hollow metal globe | Van de Graaff generator |
| Device that can be used to record a cycle ride | Helmet cam |
| Euphemism used in Monty Python's "How to recognize different parts of the body" sketch | naughty bits |
| Full of excitement and enthusiasm about something new | ABUBBLE |
| GT stands for the Italian phrase "gran ____" | TURISMO |
| Having a pH value less than seven | ACIDIC |
| Helen ____ played Catriona in Absolutely Fabulous | LEDERER |
| In 1941, artist Roland Penrose wrote the ____ Manual of Camouflage | Home Guard |
| India's Border Security Force ____ Band is the world's first military band of its kind | CAMEL |
| Indicating pain or a requirement | crying out |
| Informal description of goods awaiting a decision to buy or return | on appro |
| Isabella Linton's brother in Wuthering Heights | EDGAR |
| Jacob ____'s sculptures include St Michael's Victory over the Devil, on the east wall of Coventry Cathedral | EPSTEIN |
| Mammals with continuously growing incisors | RODENTS |
| Margot Fonteyn's best-known partner was Rudolf ____ | NUREYEV |
| Polish-born pianist Artur ____'s last concert was at the Wigmore Hall in 1976 | RUBINSTEIN |
| Product providing a steady flow of income | cash cow |
| Sailing vessel with only its foremast square-rigged (spelling with only one A) | barquentine |
| Sinclair Lewis novel satirising evangelism, filmed in 1960 | Elmer Gantry |
| Something achieving a desired result ____ | does the business |
| Sport with 15 players on each side and H-shaped goalposts | HURLING |
| The best-selling studio album of 1974 in the UK, by Paul McCartney and Wings; a description of an active Fanfara dei Bersaglieri ensemble in the Italian army | band on the Run |
| The dangling extension of the soft palate | UVULA |
| The end of Leonard Sachs's introduction to the final chorus of The Old Bull and Bush in The Good Old Days | but chiefly yourselves |
| The heel of Italy's "boot" | APULIA |
| The mounts of the Band of the Royal Netherlands Army Mounted Regiments | BICYCLES |
| The River Rothay links Grasmere and ____ Water | RYDAL |
| To pass through a membrane or porous barrier | OSMOSE |
| Union territory between Harayana and Uttar Pradesh | DELHI |
| US informal name for a large office divided into sections for individual workers | cube farm |
| What Italians call a "ferrovia" | RAILWAY |
| World of Sport anchorman, 1968-85 | Dickie Davies |
| ____ replaced Sitka as Alaska's capital in 1906 | JUNEAU |
| ____ starred with David Niven in Please Don't Eat the Daisies | Doris Day |
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