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・ Call Me No One
・ Call Me Papa Jack
・ Call Me Princess
・ Call Me Sylvia
・ Call Me Ted
・ Call Me the Breeze
・ Call Me Tonight
・ Call Me Up
・ Call Me Up in Dreamland
・ Call Me What You Like
・ Call Me When the Cross Turns Over
・ Call Me When You Get There
・ Call Me When You're Sober
・ Call money
・ Call Mountains
Call My Bluff
・ Call My Bluff (U.S. game show)
・ Call My Name
・ Call My Name (album)
・ Call My Name (Charlotte Church song)
・ Call My Name (Cheryl Cole song)
・ Call My Name (OMD song)
・ Call My Name (Pietro Lombardi song)
・ Call My Name (Prince song)
・ Call My Name (The Brilliant Green song)
・ Call My Name (Third Day song)
・ Call My Name (Tove Styrke song)
・ Call Nick Ross
・ Call Northside 777
・ Call of Cochin


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Call My Bluff : ウィキペディア英語版
Call My Bluff

''Call My Bluff'' is a long-running British game show between two teams of three celebrity contestants. The point of the game is for the teams to take it in turn to provide three definitions of an obscure word, only one of which is correct. The other team then has to guess which is the correct definition, the other two being "bluffs". It was brought back to BBC TV by producer Richard L. Lewis.
Examples of words used in ''Call My Bluff'', taken from a book published in connection with the show in 1972, are Queach, Strongle, Ablewhacket, Hickboo, Jargoon, Zurf, Morepork, and Jirble. "Queach", for instance, was defined as "a malicious caricature", "a cross between a quince and a peach", or "a mini-jungle of mixed vegetation". The first and second of those particular definitions are bluffs.
The theme music for the show was ''Ciccolino'' by Norrie Paramor.〔()〕
==Broadcast history==
''Call My Bluff'' originally aired on BBC2 from 17 October 1965 to 22 December 1988. The original host was Robin Ray, later succeeded by Robert Robinson (from 1967).
Robert Morley and Frank Muir captained the teams. Morley was later succeeded by Patrick Campbell, and Arthur Marshall took over upon Campbell's death.
Various celebrities also stood in as team captains, including Kenneth Horne, Kenneth Williams and Alan Melville.
The original series finished after Marshall's death, although a general change in the tone and atmosphere of broadcasting at the time may also have affected its temporary demise.
The show was resurrected in 1996 after an eight-year rest (apart from one special edition on 16 April 1994 for BBC Two's thirtieth birthday, which still featured Robert Robinson, but this time with Joanna Lumley as a team captain opposite Frank Muir), now as a daytime series on BBC1. It began airing on 13 May 1996 with Alan Coren and Sandi Toksvig as the team captains and Bob Holness replacing Robinson as chairman.
In 2003, Toksvig was replaced by the journalist Rod Liddle, and newsreader Fiona Bruce took the chair. The series finished again on 17 July 2005.
''Call My Bluff'' returned for a special during the BBC's ''24 Hour Panel People'' in aid for ''Comic Relief 2011'', with Alex Horne, Roisin Conaty, Russell Tovey, Tim Key, Sarah Cawood and David Walliams participating. The host was Angus Deayton.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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