| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Town in Cumbria. The poet William Wordsworth was born here. | Cockermouth | 86%
|
| Village in Essex. It was a home to a Roman River Port in the 1st Century AD that serviced Roman Britain at Camulodnum (now known as Colchester). | Fingringhoe | 29%
|
| Settlement in the Orkney Islands, Scotland. It has a counterpart in the Shetland Islands. | Twatt | 29%
|
| Village in the East Riding of Yorkshire. Known for its Iron Age Chariot Burial Cemetery. | Wetwang | 29%
|
| Small Village in Worcestershire. To the west is a Victorian Gothic mansion on the site of a manor house built in 1847 for The High Sheriff of Worcestershire. | Bell End | 14%
|
| Village in Lincolnshire. Mentioned in the Domesday Book as 'Billesfelt'. | Bitchfield | 14%
|
| Hill in Cornwall. The highest hill in the county reaching a height of 1378 feet above sea level. | Brown Willy | 14%
|
| Village in Cornwall. Located southeast of Perranporth. | Cocks | 14%
|
| Town in South Yorkshire. The local area is known for the Whitefaced Woodland Sheep. | Penistone | 14%
|
| Village in Dorset. The village makes use of older, predominantly thatched buildings. | Shitterton | 14%
|
| Village in Devon. A defence site was maintained here by the Ministry of Defence until the 1980s. | Crapstone | 0%
|
| Street in Lincolnshire. Named after the wife of a 19th Century landowner named John Hands. | Fanny Hands Lane | 0%
|
| Small Hamlet in Kent. The name may correspond with the Middle Low German word 'dwenge' meaning trap but this isn't confirmed. | Thong | 0%
|