The Palpatine clone refers to the deteriorated clone body Emperor Palpatine used to return in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, but he also had other clone experiments like Snoke (a genetic strandcast meant as a proxy), and Rey's father, Dathan, who were failures or proxies from Palpatine's cloning program on Exegol, all created by the Sith Eternal to house his spirit or serve his will.
In the context of the story, Snoke is a "genetic strandcast" (a type of clone) created by Emperor Palpatine to serve as his proxy in power.
Sifo-Dyas was a human male Jedi Master from Minashee who commissioned the Kaminoans' creation of the Grand Army of the Republic over a decade before the Clone Wars.
Rey's father, Dathan, was not Palpatine's son in the traditional sense but rather a clone derived from his genetic material. Designed to be a vessel for the Emperor's essence, Dathan lacked the Force potential necessary to carry out this purpose.
No, Darth Plagueis is not Anakin Skywalker's biological father, but there's a strong theory (especially in Star Wars Legends and early drafts) that his experiments with midi-chlorians to create life led the Force itself to create Anakin, the Chosen One, as a reaction, making Plagueis the "unintentional father" of the prophecy. In current canon, Plagueis is a legend Palpatine uses to lure Anakin, and the exact nature of Anakin's conception by the Force remains a mystery, though he had no conventional father.
Likely unaware of his true nature, Snoke was an artificial genetic strandcast created on the planet Exegol by the resurgent Dark Lord of the Sith and Galactic Emperor Darth Sidious as a proxy and the product of cloning experiments.
The clone commando RC-1136, known as Darman Skirata, got Jedi Knight Etain Tur-Mukan pregnant during the Clone Wars, resulting in their son, Venku Skirata, a Force-sensitive child born outside the Jedi Code's restrictions. Their forbidden relationship and child's birth were detailed in the Republic Commando novels, highlighting the complexities of clone troopers' development and the strictures of the Jedi Order, as Etain was killed shortly after Order 66 while protecting her family.
Ahsoka Tano from Star Wars: The Clone Wars can also technically be called a Gray Jedi, due to her forsaking the ways of the Jedi, but still following a path of good. However, neither of these two ever trained to use the dark side of the Force, so they are arguably not "true" Gray Jedi.
Palpatine would have easily won, but he was using Windu as bait to make Anakin betray the Jedi. People acting like Palpatine didn't just kill 4 other masters in a few seconds and pretty much toyed with Yoda before sending him packing. In short Palpatine would have crushed Windu if he wasn't needed for Anakins turn.
Luke was the last Jedi, then. Rey is the last Jedi, now. The title of each film in the sequel trilogy is a direct reference to the main protagonist of the sequel trilogy, Rey. In the Force awakens, it awakens in her.
The clone performs a lightsaber throw against Skywalker. Physically, Luuke Skywalker was an exact duplicate of Luke Skywalker. Mentally, he was little more than a mindless drone, an extension of Joruus C'baoth's will, needing the insane copy of a Jedi Master to provide guidance.
As far as we see, Kaminoans pretty much dedicate their entire species' existence to cloning. They're probably not just the best, but the only ones able to do it at Empire-level scale.
It's pretty clear that operation necromancer is the effort to bring back Emperor Palpatine and Snoke is a step in that effort who served as an intermediate vessel to host his spirit until the Palpatine clone was ready. It's the project to clone palpatine in to a new body after his death in VI.
Storm Troopers weren't clones. They were recruited as children from the Empire. Finn was a child taken and trained to fight.
During the High Republic, the 12 seats on the Council consist of three Grand Masters, including Yoda, Lahru, and Pra-tre Veter.
After meeting the former Jedi Ahsoka Tano, Grogu went to Tython to meditate on a seeing stone in search of other Jedi. Although he was captured by Moff Gideon and his Dark Troopers, Grogu was rescued by Djarin and the legendary Jedi Luke Skywalker, who heard him through the Force.
Ahsoka's departure haunted Yoda for some time afterward; he felt extremely guilty and remorseful, partly for refusing to stand by her and partly for placing her on the path that led to her departure from the Jedi Order. In fact, his guilt was so great that the Dark Side attempted to use it against him, but failed.
Padmé didn't wear bras (or underwear) in Star Wars because director George Lucas famously told Carrie Fisher (Princess Leia) there was "no underwear in space," a rule extended to other characters like Padmé, suggesting a sci-fi lack of undergarments for comfort or visual reasons, though Carrie Fisher found the rule odd and compared it to Padmé's frequent costume changes, as cited in Wookieepedia and Reddit. While Leia famously went braless under her white robes (using gaffer tape instead), Padmé's elaborate outfits often made bras impractical or unnecessary for the desired look.
In Star Wars Rebels, Sabine is introduced as a Mandalorian graffiti artist and bounty hunter who left the Empire for the Rebel Alliance after a weapon she developed for them was used against her people; as a rebel, she joins the crew of the Ghost, recruiting Wedge Antilles to their cause, and on stealing the Darksaber ...
Lux Bonteri
However, Ahsoka found it annoying, as she immediately shrugged his crush off her. This changed during their time together, as Ahsoka began developing feelings for Lux until she and Padme left Raxus, she and Lux said their goodbyes before going their separate ways.
In Star Wars lore, Order 37 was a grim Clone Trooper contingency plan to capture a wanted individual (often a Jedi) by taking a civilian population hostage, locking down the area, and threatening mass execution if the target wasn't surrendered, making it a horrific tactic used by the Empire to force Jedi compliance. It was considered more brutal than Order 66 because it targeted civilians directly, forcing Jedi to often turn themselves in to save innocent lives, as seen on planets like Bellassa.
So in the comic it's stated that it was Luke who crippled Snoke. (Scar on top of head, part of his left face missing, having problem to walk properly and sit down).
Plagueis was fully aware Sidious was training Maul as a Sith assassin. Plagueis knew about Maul, Maul suspected Sidious had another master but didn't know for sure. Plagueis had actually intended to end the rule of two with himself and bring back the Sith numbers so he encouraged Sidious.