| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Line 1 | After the war, I went back to New York | 92%
|
| Line 6 | Alexander Hamilton began to climb | 92%
|
| Line 10 | Are you aware that we're making history? | 92%
|
| Line 5 | Even though we started at the very same time | 92%
|
| Line 9 | Gentlemen of the jury, I'm curious, bear with me | 92%
|
| Line 7 | How to account for his rise to the top? | 92%
|
| Line 3 | I finished up my studies, and I practiced law | 92%
|
| Line 4 | I practiced law, Burr worked next door | 92%
|
| Line 8 | Man, the man is non-stop | 92%
|
| Line 12 | The liberty behind deliberation (non-stop) | 92%
|
| Line 11 | This is the first murder trial of our brand-new nation | 92%
|
| Line 2 | A-after the war, I went back to New York | 85%
|
| Line 16 | Call your first witness, that's all you had to say | 85%
|
| Line 14 | Co-counsel Hamilton, sit down | 85%
|
| Line 13 | I intend to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt with my assistant counsel | 85%
|
| Line 17 | Okay [1] | 85%
|
| Line 18 | One more thing | 85%
|
| Line 15 | Our client, Levi Weeks, is innocent | 85%
|
| Line 19 | Why do you assume you're the smartest in the room? [1] | 69%
|
| Line 20 | Why do you assume you're the smartest in the room? [2] | 69%
|
| Line 21 | Why do you assume you're the smartest in the room? [3] | 69%
|
| Line 22 | Soon that attitude may be your doom (aw!) | 62%
|
| Line 23 | Why do you write like you're running out of time? | 62%
|
| Line 48 | Free ammunition for your enemies (aw!) | 46%
|
| Line 24 | Write day and night like you're running out of time? [1] | 46%
|
| Line 54 | Aaron Burr, sir | 38%
|
| Line 53 | Alexander? [1] | 38%
|
| Line 144 | Alexander [2] | 38%
|
| Line 146 | Alexander [3] | 38%
|
| Line 116 | Alexander joins forces with James Madison | 38%
|
| Line 28 | Along in harmony, and nowhere is it stronger that in Albany | 38%
|
| Line 75 | And if it fails? | 38%
|
| Line 113 | And if your wife could share a fraction of your time | 38%
|
| Line 117 | And John Jay to write a series of essays | 38%
|
| Line 92 | And what if you're backing the wrong horse? | 38%
|
| Line 107 | Angelica | 38%
|
| Line 71 | A series of essays, anonymously published | 38%
|
| Line 43 | Bright young man | 38%
|
| Line 93 | Burr, we studied, and we foughtm and we killed | 38%
|
| Line 60 | Burr, you're a better lawyer than me | 38%
|
| Line 56 | Can we confer, sir? | 38%
|
| Line 27 | Corruption's such an old song that we can sing | 38%
|
| Line 72 | Defending the document to the public | 38%
|
| Line 118 | Defending the new United States Constitution | 38%
|
| Line 108 | Don't forget to write | 38%
|
| Line 52 | Do what you do | 38%
|
| Line 89 | Do you support this Constitution? | 38%
|
| Line 119 | Entitled "The Federalist Papers" | 38%
|
| Line 128 | Every day you fight, like you're running out of time | 38%
|
| Line 47 | Every proclamation guarantees | 38%
|
| Line 134 | Every second you're alive? Every second you're alive? | 38%
|
| Line 95 | For once in your life, take a stand with pride | 38%
|
| Line 94 | For the notion of a nation, we now get to build | 38%
|
| Line 40 | Goes and proposes his own form of government (what?) | 38%
|
| Line 84 | Good night | 38%
|
| Line 36 | Hamilton, at the Constitutional Convention | 38%
|
| Line 125 | Hamilton wrote the other 51 | 38%
|
| Line 69 | Hear me out | 38%
|
| Line 104 | He is not a lot of fun, but there's no one | 38%
|
| Line 148 | Helpless | 38%
|
| Line 85 | Hey! | 38%
|
| Line 41 | His own plan for a new form of government (what?) | 38%
|
| Line 30 | Honestly, that's why public service seems to be calling me (he's just non-stop) | 38%
|
| Line 133 | How do you write every second you're alive? | 38%
|
| Line 131 | How do you write like tommorow won't arrive? | 38%
|
| Line 132 | How do you write like you need it to survive? | 38%
|
| Line 102 | I am accompanied by someone who always pays | 38%
|
| Line 101 | I am sailing off the London | 38%
|
| Line 74 | I disagree | 38%
|
| Line 96 | I don't understand how you stand to the side | 38%
|
| Line 114 | If I could grant you peace of mind | 38%
|
| Line 34 | If not, then I'll be Socrates | 38%
|
| Line 103 | I have found a wealthy husband who will keep in comfort for all my days | 38%
|
| Line 145 | I have to leave | 38%
|
| Line 62 | I know I talk to much, I'm abrasive | 38%
|
| Line 139 | I know it's a lot to ask (Treasury or State?) | 38%
|
| Line 97 | I'll keep all my plans close to my chest (wait for it, wait for it, wait for it, wait) | 38%
|
| Line 138 | I'm asking you to be my right-hand man (Treasury or state?) | 38%
|
| Line 99 | I'm taking my time, watching the afterbirth of a nation | 38%
|
| Line 122 | In the end, they wrote 85 essays in the span of six months | 38%
|
| Line 31 | I practiced the law, I practically perfected it | 38%
|
| Line 57 | Is this a legal matter? | 38%
|
| Line 79 | It's full of contradictions | 38%
|
| Line 32 | I've seen injustice in the world, and I've corrected it | 38%
|
| Line 37 | I was chosen for the Constitutional Convention | 38%
|
| Line 124 | James Madison wrote 29 | 38%
|
| Line 123 | John Jay got sick after writing five | 38%
|
| Line 112 | Just stay alive, that would be enough | 38%
|
| Line 26 | Keep on fighting in the meantime (non-stop) | 38%
|
| Line 143 | Let's go | 38%
|
| Line 147 | Look around, look around at how lucky we are to be alive right now | 38%
|
| Line 109 | Look at where you are | 38%
|
| Line 110 | Look at where you started | 38%
|
| Line 106 | My Alexander | 38%
|
| Line 65 | My client needs a strong defense, you're the solution | 38%
|
| Line 68 | No | 38%
|
| Line 82 | No, no way | 38%
|
| Line 73 | No one will read it | 38%
|
| Line 70 | No way! | 38%
|
| Line 39 | Now, what I'm going to say may sound indelicate (aww!) | 38%
|
| Line 90 | Of course | 38%
|
| Line 141 | Sir, do you want me to run the Treasury or State department? | 38%
|
| Line 80 | So is independence | 38%
|
| Line 78 | So, it needs amendments | 38%
|
| Line 42 | Talks for six hours, the convention is listless | 38%
|
| Line 77 | The Constitution's a mess | 38%
|
| Line 111 | The fact that you're alive is a miracle | 38%
|
| Line 91 | Then defend it | 38%
|
| Line 67 | The new U.S. Constitution? | 38%
|
| Line 120 | The plan was to write a total of 25 essays | 38%
|
| Line 38 | There as a New York junior delegate | 38%
|
| Line 121 | The work divided evenly among the three men | 38%
|
| Line 29 | This colony's economy's increasingly stalling and | 38%
|
| Line 35 | Throwing verbal rocks at these mediocrities | 38%
|
| Line 137 | To get the people that I need | 38%
|
| Line 140 | To leave behind the world you know | 38%
|
| Line 142 | Treasury | 38%
|
| Line 100 | Watching the tension grow | 38%
|
| Line 81 | We have to start somewhere | 38%
|
| Line 55 | Well, it's the middle of the night | 38%
|
| Line 88 | We won the war, what was it all for? | 38%
|
| Line 86 | What are you waiting for? | 38%
|
| Line 59 | What do you need? | 38%
|
| Line 87 | What do you stall for? (What?) | 38%
|
| Line 105 | Who can match you for turn of phrase | 38%
|
| Line 66 | Who's your client? | 38%
|
| Line 46 | Why do you always say what you believe? [2] | 38%
|
| Line 115 | Would that be enough? | 38%
|
| Line 58 | Yes, and it's important to me | 38%
|
| Line 63 | You're incredible in court | 38%
|
| Line 83 | You're making a mistake | 38%
|
| Line 64 | You're succinct, persuasive | 38%
|
| Line 44 | Yo, who the f is this? | 38%
|
| Line 130 | Are you running out of time? (Aww!) | 31%
|
| Line 76 | Burr, that's why we need it | 31%
|
| Line 51 | Every day, you fight like it's going out of style | 31%
|
| Line 126 | How do you write like you're running out of time? | 31%
|
| Line 98 | I'll wait here and see which way the wind will blow | 31%
|
| Line 136 | I'm doing the best I can | 31%
|
| Line 150 | Look around, isn't this enough? | 31%
|
| Line 33 | Now for a strong central democracy | 31%
|
| Line 61 | Okay [2] | 31%
|
| Line 149 | They are asking me to lead | 31%
|
| Line 152 | We will never be satisfied (to be satisfied?) | 31%
|
| Line 45 | Why do you always say what you believe? [1] | 31%
|
| Line 49 | Why do you write like it's going out of style? (Hey) | 31%
|
| Line 50 | Write day and night like it's going out of style? (Hey) | 31%
|
| Line 127 | Write day and night like you're running out of time? [2] | 31%
|
| Line 166 | Hamilton, just you wait | 23%
|
| Line 151 | He will never be satisfied (what would be enough?) | 23%
|
| Line 165 | I am Alexander Hamilton | 23%
|
| Line 167 | I am not throwin' away my shot | 23%
|
| Line 164 | I am not throwin' away my shot (just you wait) [2] | 23%
|
| Line 129 | Like you're running out of time | 23%
|
| Line 161 | Why do you fight like | 23%
|
| Line 162 | History has its eyes on you | 15%
|
| Line 163 | I am not throwin' away my shot (just you wait) [1] | 15%
|
| Line 135 | They're asking me to lead | 15%
|
| Line 158 | (He will never be satisfied, satisfied) | 8%
|
| Line 154 | History has its eyes on you (look around) | 8%
|
| Line 153 | Satisfied, satisfied | 8%
|
| Line 159 | Why do you assume you're the smartest in the room? (History has its eyes) | 8%
|
| Line 156 | Why do you assume you're the smartest in the room? (Non-stop) [1] | 8%
|
| Line 157 | Why do you assume you're the smartest in the room? (Non-stop) [2] | 8%
|
| Line 160 | Why do you write like you're running out of time? (Non-stop) | 8%
|
| Line 25 | Every day you fight, like you're running out of time (hey) | 0%
|
| Line 155 | Why do you assume you're the smartest in the room? [4] | 0%
|