Jeopardy Questions & Jeopardy Categories
Those
searching online for Jeopardy questions and categories are likely to
be considering a house game of Jeopardy! among. Finding free
Jeopardy category and clue content is a lot easier than you might
think, if you have to know where to look. I'll provide you with a
list of category and question ideas taken directly from the
television show, then provide you with a tip on where to find more
great Jeopardy answers. You may have to find the correct question
for each clue, but collecting enough right answers for a game or two
should be no trouble at all.
Jeopardy Questions
Jeopardy questions seem so unique because they are the answers to clues revealed on the Jeopardy board. The first time you watch the classic tv show, Jeopardy!, it takes a little time to get used to the Q&A format. Even if you've watched the game show for years, the first time you play the Jeopardy! board game or home video edition, you might find it tricky to blurt out questions instead of answers.
Jeopardy Categories
Jeopardy categories also take some getting used to. The old Saturday Night Live skits where Will Ferrell plays Alec Trebek hit the nail on the head when it always seemed to include the "Potent Potables" category. Snappy category titles and puns tend to dot the Jeopardy board. Lucky for you, you won't have to embarrass yourself by thinking up your own clever phrases for categories. Once again, I'll provide a few below, while offering a list for getting so a huge archived list of real categories. All you'll have to do is click on some links and jot down the name information. I'll show you how.
Sample Jeopardy Categories
These categories comes from late in Jeopardy! Season 27. These should be old enough that longtime viewers have forgotten them, but current enough that competitors won't be turned off by them. I mainly list these categories separately from their clues to provide a small sample to those who aren't real familiar with the world's greatest tv trivia game. Later, I'll offer clue lists that go along with these categories. I'll offer a quick explanation of each category below.
- Tools of the Writer's Trade - Self-explanatory.
- Quarterback U. - Match quarterback with their college alma mater.
- The "N" Crowd - Last names starting with N.
- Flaming Foods - Foods cooked by flame.
- Rivers - Names of rivers around the globe.
- Animals in Italian - Italian words for animals.
- The Old West (Double Jeopardy) - American frontier clues.
- Books & Movies (Double Jeopardy) - Completes a book title, begins a film title.
- Julius Caesar Salad (Double Jeopardy) - Words derived from Julius Caesar.
- Boning Up (Double Jeopardy) - Questions about bone structure.
- Big Stuff (Double Jeopardy) - Phrases beginning with the word "big".
- The Sanders of Time (Double Jeopardy) - People named Sanders.
Sample Jeopardy Questions
Below are the questions that came with each category above. Remember that the answers are framed in question form. So the answer to the $200 "Tools of the Writer's Trade" question would be "What is an index card?" If not framed that way on Jeopardy, the answer is considered incorrect.
Remember that the "Daily Double" questions don't have a set value they're worth. They allow you to double-up on your money amount by placing a wager on the outcome of the question. If you have $1200 and you wager $1200, you'll either get the answer right and have $2400 or you'll get it wrong and be back to $0. In the case you don't have $1000, you can wager up to $1000, though this means you could go into the negative cash if you miss the answer. Also remember you can wager less than your total amount, so if you have $1200, you could wager $1000, $800, $600, $200 or some other dollar amount.
Tools of the Writer's Trade
$200 - Nabokov's novels all began on 3x5 these, which he kept
under his pillow in case of inspiration - Answer: an index card
$400 - In 2009 this, on which Cormac McCarthy produced 5 million
words, sold for over $250,000 at auction - Answer: a typewriter
$600 - At London's Charles Dickens museum, visitors can handle
Dickens' own pen of this type - Answer: a fountain pen
$800 - Raymond Chandler composed screenplays by talking into this
machine, a brand name copyrighted in 1907 - Answer: a dictaphone
$1000 - Steinbeck was obsessed with these; the Mongol 2 3/8 model
came closest to the perfect point - Answer: a pencil
Quarterback U.
$200 - Peyton Manning - Answer: University of Tennessee
$400 - Vince Young - Answer: University of Texas
$600 - Steve Young - Answer: BYU (Brigham Young)
$800 - Drew Brees - Answer: Purdue
$1000 - Jim Kelly & Gino Torretta - Answer: University of Miami
The "N" Crowd
$200 - He was a great rugby & lacrosse player but he's better
known as "The Father of Basketball" - Answer: Naismith
$400 - Once in the news himself, today this marine colonel hosts
"War Stories" on the Fox News Channel - Answer: (Ollie) North
$600 - After a breakdown around 1919, this Russian-born ballet
dancer spent the rest of his life in & out of asylums - Answer:
Najinksy
$800 (Daily Double) - He not only won the 1971 Nobel Prize for
Literature, he also served in the Chilean senate - Answer: (Pablo)
Neruda
$1000 - Egypt's president from 1956 to 1970, he dreamed of leading
the whole Arab world - Answer: Nasser
Rivers
$200 - As the central river artery, this is one of the world's
busiest waterways - Answer: the Mississippi
$400 - Although its ultimate source is still debated, this river
flows into the Atlantic - Answer: the Amazon
$600 - From two small sources, this river flows to the North Sea -
Answer: the Rhine
$800 - The head of this river is dry for much of the year and flows
to an estuary on the North Sea - Answer: the Thames
$1000 - Flowing westward, this river has a drainage basin that
covers seven states - Answer: the Colorado
Flaming Foods
$200 - "Joy of Cooking" instructions for making this cherry
dessert: "Standing back, ignite with a long lighted match - Answer:
cherries jubilee
$400 - Henri Charpentier is said to have created this dessert crepes
dish by accident; the dish was a flaming success - Answer: Crepe
Suzette
$600 - You can make a flaming version of this tex-mex dish whose
name means "little sashes" - Answer: fajitas
$800 - This dessert, cake & ice cream browned in the oven, can be
flambeed for a dramatic presentation - Answer: Baked Alaskan
$1000 - Brennan's in New Orleans says that this flaming fruity
dessert is the most requested item on its menu - Answer: Bananas
Foster
Animals in Italian
$200 - Avoid the sting as you tell us that un'ape is this insect
- Answer: the bee
$400 - If you're called un asino, you're either a fool, or this
animal - Answer: a donkey
$600 - That's the scariest ragno, one of these, I've ever seen!
Don't tell Signorina Muffet - Answer: a spider
$800 - Un cane is this; ready for walkies? - Answer: a dog
$1000 - It really gets me that una capra is one of these farm
animals - Answer: a goat
Sample Double Jeopardy Questions
These questions are from the Double Jeopardy categories in the same episode as above. In Double Jeopardy, the answers are a little harder, but the corresponding answers double in value. The values can really change in Double Jeopardy, since an incorrect answer results in twice the points being deducted.
The Old West
$400 - The first of his cowboy hats was called the boss of the
plains; Carlsbad, the most popular model, followed - Answer: Stetson
$800 - The act of herding cattle; death was sometimes called "the
last" one - Answer: the roundup
$1200 - In 1859 this Nevada town sprung up virtually overnight with
the discovery of the Comstock Lode - Answer: Virginia City
$1600 - In 1867 Joseph McCoy set up a shipping yard in Abilene,
Kansas to hold Texas cattle arriving on this trail - Answer: Chisolm
Trail
$2000 - As the result of an injury suffered in his first gunfight in
1876, he began using a cane & often used it as a weapon - Answer:
Bat Masterson
Books & Movies
$400 - The Power and the ___ Daze - Answer: Glory
$800 - The Confessions of Nat ___ and Hooch - Answer: Turner
$1200 - The Painted ___ on a Wire - Answer: Bird
$1600 - Vanity ___ Game - Answer: Fair
$2000 - The Red and the ___ Knight - Answer: Black
Julius Caesar Salad
$400 - In 2008 a marble one of these was found in a French river,
apparently thrown there right after Caesar's fall - Answer: a bust
$800 - It's named for Julius Caesar & is sometimes written in a date
as "7" - Answer: July
$1200 - In Spanish the name becomes this, as on former boxing
champion Chavez - Answer: Julio Caesar Chavez
$1600 - (Daily Double) - This 5-word line spoken by the soothsayer
is a quote from Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" - Answer: Beware the
Ides of March
$2000 - In 45 B.C. Caesar was given permission to wear this, which
he appreciated as it covered his baldness - Answer: a laurel wreath
Boning Up
$400 - The name of this condition that affects mostly women
literally means "porous bone" - Answer: osteoporosis
$800 - This fatty substance inside the bones is a major site of
blood cell production - Answer: the marrow
$1200 - Your false ribs are so called because unlike your true ribs,
they aren't attached to this breastbone - Answer: the sternum
$1600 - (Daily Double) - This bone with a ball-&-socket joint at one
end is about 1/4 of your height - Answer: the femur
$2000 - Kelly of the Clue Crew shows an anatomical animation on the
monitor.) Most broken bones in children are this type of fracture
with a colorful name, in which the break cuts only partway through
the bone - Answer: a greenstick
"Big" Stuff
$400 - Jazz musicians & jockeys helped give New York City this
nickname - Answer: the Big Apple
$800 - If you're under this, you're at the circus - Answer: the big
top
$1200 - Digit also known as the hallux - Answer: the big toe
$1600 - In France this feature of the night sky is known as "le
casserole" - Answer: the Big Dipper
$2000 - Rhyming nickname of Boston's Interstate 93 construction
project - Answer: the Big Dig
The Sanders of Time
$400 - A Louisville museum is devoted to the success story of
this man who was famous for his breasts, thighs & legs - Answer:
Col. Sander
$800 - In an episode of this Garry Shandling series, the title star
thinks David Duchovny is hitting on him - Answer: The Larry Sanders
Show
$1200 - This Heisman trophy winner played his college ball at
Oklahoma State - Answer: Barry Sanders
$1600 - Olympic gold medal swimmer and TV personality seen here -
Answer: Summer Sanders
$2000 - On Dec. 10, 2010 he conducted a one-man, 9-hour filibuster
on the Senate floor to protest a tax bill - Answer: Bernie Sanders
Sample Final Jeopardy Question
Once you've finished Double Jeopardy, players move on to the Final Jeopardy. You are shown a category ("World History" in this case) and given the opportunity to wager all, none, or some of the prize money you've won so far. The other players do the same. If you get the answer right, you win the amount you wagered. If you get the answer wrong, you lose a corresponding amount. Final Jeopardy allows 30 seconds to write down the correct answer. Jeopardy strategies exist for deciding how much to wager, but the player in the lead usually wagers what it will take to beat their 2nd place opponent's score if it were doubled--usually you bet twice their total plus $1. Here's the sample Final Jeopardy question.
Final Jeopardy!: Surus was the last known one of these to survive a mountain crossing in the 3rd century B.C. - Answer: an elephant
Where to Find More Jeopardy Questions and Categories
To find a huge archive of Jeopardy! categories and questions, go to J! Archive, which records the questions, answers, and categories from Jeopardy episodes. While the resources doesn't include every Jeopardy episode since the series relaunch back in 1984, J-Archive has a large number of them. The site currently has over 216,000 different Jeopardy clues and answers. It might take a little while to get your info, but you'll be able to host a Jeopardy night with official Jeopardy questions and answers. To see the answer to a listed clue, simply roll the cursor over the corresponding dollar value in the box of with the Jeopardy question. Good luck and have a great time playing the best trivia game in the world.


