700, and the initials of this puzzle's longer answers | 57 |
Person who's always feeling down in the mouth?: Abbr. | 57 |
Like one in need of an American Sign Language interpreter | 57 |
Silas ___, emissary of the Continental Congress to France | 57 |
Raymond's wife on "Everybody Loves Raymond" | 57 |
City of 15+ million whose busiest street is Chandni Chowk | 57 |
Woody's ''Indecent Proposal'' co-star | 57 |
Setting for part of Kerouac's "On the Road" | 57 |
Last word of "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow" | 57 |
''For He's a Jolly Good Fellow'' word | 57 |
"Laus ___" (words atop the Washington Monument) | 57 |
What a "no-strings-attached" relationship lacks | 57 |
Northern Ireland's second-largest city, after Belfast | 57 |
Moliere's ''L'ecole ___ femmes'' | 57 |
Food ___ (place where affordable food is hard to come by) | 57 |
Midwest metropolis--it has a view of Canada to the south! | 57 |
Actor Patel of "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" | 57 |
It's shaken "off the lily," euphemistically | 57 |
"Say that thou ___ forsake me ..." (Shakepeare) | 57 |
Tommy Pickles' younger brother on "Rugrats" | 57 |
Banknote that once featured Saddam Hussein's portrait | 57 |
British Prime Minister during U.S. Grant's presidency | 57 |
Surveyor Jeremiah, for whom a famous line is partly named | 57 |
It became extinct less than 100 years after its discovery | 57 |
Mideast capital whose name means "the big tree" | 57 |
"La __ è mobile": "Rigoletto" aria | 57 |
"Love Me Two Times" group, with "the" | 57 |
Item banned under players' helmets by the NFL in 2001 | 57 |
Paris Hilton's on again/off again boyfriend Rienhardt | 57 |
Earthmoving machine, and hopefully not the one driving it | 57 |
"It's On (Dr. ___) 187um Killa" (Eazy-E EP) | 57 |
He wrote "None but the brave deserves the fair" | 57 |
Speakeasy haters, in the "Boardwalk Empire" era | 57 |
What Ariz. and Hawaii are the only two states not to have | 57 |
"Ma mère, je la vois," in "Carmen" | 57 |
"Ebony and Ivory" or "I Got You Babe" | 57 |
"Eazy-___-It" (double-platinum album by Eazy-E) | 57 |
"Into ___ life some rain must fall": Longfellow | 57 |
Band with the 1975 #1 hit "One of These Nights" | 57 |
"No one can __ million dollars honestly": Bryan | 57 |
"The Wiz" song "___ on Down the Road" | 57 |
"___ Peach" (1972 Allman Brothers double album) | 57 |
Directive in the chapter "Down the Rabbit-Hole" | 57 |
Three-vowel word that's a homophone of a fourth vowel | 57 |
Type of brandy whose name means "water of life" | 57 |
Self-described "World's Online Marketplace" | 57 |
Auction site that explicitly forbids the selling of souls | 57 |
Broadway composer Fred's laundry detergent of choice? | 57 |
Food that's French for "flash of lightning" | 57 |
Author of "The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana" | 57 |
"Poetic" or "Prose" mythological work | 57 |
Hemingway's posthumous "The Garden of ___" | 57 |
Hemingway's posthumous "The Garden of ---" | 57 |
Costar of TV's "How to Marry a Millionaire" | 57 |
Gertrude ___, the first woman to swim the English Channel | 57 |
John Glenn's portrayer in "The Right Stuff" | 57 |
Nicollette's role on "Desperate Housewives" | 57 |
Plimpton book subtitled "An American Biography" | 57 |
Minnesota city where part of "Fargo" was filmed | 57 |
"Despicable Me" daughter who wears the pink hat | 57 |
Former NYC Mayor and "People's Court" judge | 57 |
___ Mode, female character in "The Incredibles" | 57 |
TV character first seen on "Cavalcade of Stars" | 57 |
The only Ron Howard film a crossword solver needs to know | 57 |
"Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" playwright | 57 |
Band with the 1996 hit "Novocaine for the Soul" | 57 |
"___then my soul with exultation dances": Keats | 57 |
"__, Indiana": 1990s Omri Katz sci-fi TV series | 57 |
Kid-lit character with a long face, in more ways than one | 57 |
Cop Popeye who inspired "The French Connection" | 57 |
B. MacDonald's 1945 best seller, with "The" | 57 |
Its national anthem is "Bilady, Bilady, Bilady" | 57 |
Followers of "cows" or "pigs" in song | 57 |
'In the Valley of --' (2007 Tommy Lee Jones film) | 57 |
Mrs. Robinson's daughter, in "The Graduate" | 57 |
"Seinfeld" character who really can't dance | 57 |
Its flight attendants' greeting is "Shalom" | 57 |
German river where American and Soviet forces met in 1945 | 57 |
Sir Edward who composed "Pomp and Circumstance" | 57 |
Composer of the "Pomp and Circumstance" marches | 57 |
"The Book of ___" (2010 Denzel Washington film) | 57 |
Change "captain" to "cap'n," e.g. | 57 |
___ Street, main thoroughfare in "Peyton Place" | 57 |
3-year-old TV character voiced by 45-year-old Kevin Clash | 57 |
"___ World" ("Sesame Street" segment) | 57 |
"The moan of doves in immemorial ___": Tennyson | 57 |
"Don't Bring Me Down" rock group, for short | 57 |
"Can't Get It Out of My Head" band, briefly | 57 |
Repeated word in Mark 15:34 that means "my God" | 57 |
Trains like the one mentioned in "12 Angry Men" | 57 |
New York and Chicago have the oldest ones in the Americas | 57 |
"Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" villainess | 57 |
"_____ Dream" ("Lohengrin" soliloquy) | 57 |
''If all ___ fails, read the directions'' | 57 |
Jack's beloved in "The Yeomen of the Guard" | 57 |
''That's What Friends Are For'' voice | 57 |
Cassandra Peterson's "Mistress of the Dark" | 57 |
One of his catchphrases is "kick it up a notch" | 57 |
''Shot heard round the world'' originator | 57 |
Techno-funk band with the #1 hit "Unbelievable" | 57 |