The Golden ___ Bridge

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Possible Answers: Gate.

Last seen on: Daily Celebrity Crossword – 5/31/18 Top 40 Thursday

Random information on the term “The Golden ___ Bridge”:

Ruth Leuwerik (23 April 1924 – 12 January 2016) was a German film actress, one of the most popular stars of German film during the 1950s. She appeared in 34 films between 1950 and 1977. Leuwerik is probably best known for her portrayal of Maria von Trapp in the films The Trapp Family and The Trapp Family in America.

Born in Essen as Ruth Leeuwerik, she grew up there and in Münster. She began her acting career with stage roles in the late 1940s. In the 1950s she and Dieter Borsche were considered as the ideal couple of the German film. In 1962 she starred in the Helmut Käutner film Redhead, which was entered in the 12th Berlin International Film Festival. She is a five-time Bambi Award winner. Leuwerik died in Munich on 12 January 2016.

The Golden ___ Bridge on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “Gate”:

A lychgate, also spelled lichgate, lycugate, lyke-gate or as two separate words lych gate, (from Old English lic, corpse) is a gateway covered with a roof found at the entrance to a traditional English or English-style churchyard. Also called a resurrection gate. Examples exist also outside the British Isles in places such as Sweden.

The word lych survived into modern English from the Old English or Saxon word for corpse, mostly as an adjective in particular phrases or names, such as lych bell, the hand-bell rung before a corpse; lych way, the path along which a corpse was carried to burial (this in some districts was supposed to establish a right-of-way); lych owl, the screech owl, because its cry was a portent of death; and lyke-wake, a night watch over a corpse (see Lyke-Wake Dirge).

Compare modern German “Leiche”, Dutch “lijk” and lichaam, West Frisian “lyk”, and Swedish “lik”, all meaning corpse. It is interesting to note that the German language also holds a phrase referring to one who could talk to the dead as a medium or “Leiche Zunge”. The word also appears in Old English and pre-Christian Galway as a “Lich Tongue” – referring to one who was thought to be able to appease the spirits of upset ancestors and spirits returning to former abodes and creating turmoil on All Hallows’ Eve (Halloween or Samhain).

Gate on Wikipedia