| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Marge and Homer's firstborn son | Bart Simpson | 100%
|
| To begin at the beginning | Start | 95%
|
| Some museums are full of it | Art | 94%
|
| Throw one of these at the bullseye | Dart | 92%
|
| No longer together | Apart | 90%
|
| To leave or go away | Depart | 90%
|
| A type of wagon, often found in US grocery stores (What the UK calls a "trolley") | Cart | 89%
|
| What avid quiz solvers tend to be | Smart | 89%
|
| A piece of something, or what you might comb into your hair | Part | 84%
|
| A marketplace | Mart | 81%
|
| Not sweet, as with apples | Tart | 81%
|
| An unsightly skin growth, often found on witches' noses | Wart | 79%
|
| Two pints, or one-fourth of a gallon (U.S,. or Imperial) | Quart | 78%
|
| If sailing to the capital of Tasmania, this type of sea map might come in handy | Chart | 70%
|
| To share, as with wisdom or knowledge | Impart | 62%
|
| A male deer or stag | Hart | 56%
|
| The capital of Tasmania | Hobart | 56%
|
| An earthen wall built around a fortification (as mentioned in the "Star-Spangled Banner") | Rampart | 56%
|
| Royal last name of Mary, Queen of Scots and Bonnie Prince Charlie, among others | Stuart | 51%
|
| Legendary British actor. He played Jean-Luc Picard | Patrick Stewart | 49%
|
| Legendary American film noir actor. He played Spade. | Humphrey Bogart | 44%
|
| An arrogant or rude person, often newly-rich | Upstart | 22%
|