The unrest, which the UN says has left more than 2,500 dead from April through June, comes as Iraq grapples with a protracted political deadlock and months of protests by the Sunni Arab minority.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks, but most of the violence struck Shiite targets.
Sunni militants linked to al-Qaeda frequently target Shiite Muslims, whom they regard as apostates.
Today's deadliest violence stuck the capital, with five car bombs ripping through markets, mostly in Shiite areas of Baghdad.
Shootings elsewhere in the capital killed four others, while bombings in the restive northern cities of Kirkuk and Mosul left one person dead and three wounded.
The violence comes a day after a series of attacks north of Baghdad left 45 people dead, including 23 killed when a suicide bomber blew himself up in the middle of a funeral taking place inside a Shiite religious hall.
Figures compiled by AFP, meanwhile, showed the death toll from April through June was more than twice that of the first three months of the year.
Attacks in recent months have targeted a wide cross-section of Iraqi society -- government targets and security forces were hit by car bombs, mosques were struck by suicide attackers, anti-Qaeda militiamen were shot dead, and Iraqis watching and playing football were killed by blasts.
The surge in violence comes amid a protracted political standoff within Iraq's national unity government, with little in the way of landmark legislation passed since a 2010 parliamentary election.
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