PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER e5 + 52 SERVED
Welcome to
Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! A blog like this week’s occurs only once in a blue moon.
Yes, a blue moon is upon us. Gaze heavenward this evening, July 31. Drink in
the second full moon in the “moonth” of July.
(Next week’s first August 2015 Puzzleria!
will be uploaded in the wake of what promises to be quite entertaining debates
with Republican candidates, August 6 in Cleveland. Viewing the debates may help you decide whether you are a Trumpublican or Trumpocrat.)
We have a full “Moonu”
(that’s Moonu, not Moon Unit) of puzzle slices. Four of ‘em. (The only blue
ones, we think, are those we’ve strewn with bleu cheese crumbles that melt in
our ovens, then in your mouth, not in your hand. M&M&M&M&M!)
But first, have
a taste of this bonus appetizer… with an answer that happens to be a particular
type of appetizer. Solving the puzzle may require a measure of Concentration:
Hint: The
appetizer is often associated with one particular national restaurant chain.
We are serving
up this week a pair of “names in the news” bonus puzzle slices. Think of them as wavy gravy for you to pore (sic) over... your brain-wavy gray matter:
One: another clever “present and past” political bonus puzzle baked up by our esteemed Master Gourmet French Puzzle Chef “Monsieur Garcon du Parachutisme,” also known as “skydiveboy” in the blogosphere, and also known as Mark Scott of Seattle, Washington…
and
Two: another picture puzzle, somewhat reminiscent of last week’s “Photo finish/Finnish photo” puzzle. Here they are:
Donald Trump
was not the first “Old Yellow-hair” to have aspirations for the White House.
Can you name
him?
Thank you, Mark,
for that historical morsel. Your puzzle is true Trumpery yet is truly not trumpery, if you get my
drift.
Speaking of excellent puzzlery, at the end of last week’s Puzzleria! comments section, Puzzlerian! ron posted a link to an excellent puzzle in the wonderful Futility Closet web site. The puzzle he cited was the July 29 entry, “Knife Act.”
I am still pondering the puzzle. Puzzlerian! Word Woman commented, suggesting a splendid “thinking-outside-the-cake-mix-box” solution, but ron indicated that FC’s intended solution was different from hers.
I’d crawl a
mile for a Camel
Each of these
three pictures illustrates a singular noun. Put all 17 letters of those nouns
into a mixed-up pyle and rearrange them to spell out two names recently in the news.
Both names would appear within the same news article or report.
Red Herringbone
Hint: Reptile is to Crawl as Camel is to ____.
Redder Herringbone Hint:
Reptile is to Crawl as Lucky Strike is to _____.
Goldest/Reddest Herringbone Hint: Reptile is to Crawl as Old Gold is to _____.
Redder Herringbone Hint:
Reptile is to Crawl as Lucky Strike is to _____.
Goldest/Reddest Herringbone Hint: Reptile is to Crawl as Old Gold is to _____.
(Feel free to
employ Paul’s “hovering mouse technique” {see Paul’s July 28 at 12:43 PM post in last week’s comments}, but only as a last resort, please. Actually, I tried using Paul’s mouseterious hovering tactic on the these three illustrations but gleaned no useful information. But, in any event, only the non-edible pink-and-red photo should pose any real problem to you perceptive Puzzlerians!)
MOONU
Specialty Of
The House Slice:
Property
listings
Shrewd, huge,
beaut, timeliness, jamb, maniac, pear, boats, least,…
The
antepenultimate, penultimate and ultimate words in the list share a quite unusual
property… (Okay, okay! The last three words in the list share a quite unusual
property.)
What are these
somewhat unusual and quite unusual properties? Can you name other words that
possess either of these properties?
Hint: Neither the
words “thing” nor “spring” share either the somewhat unusual or quite unusual
properties.
“Dad dropped
his camera!”
Name two words
associated with “drops”. Replace each with a homophone. Place these next to
each other, without a space, in alphabetical order. Reverse the first two
letters of one of the homophones.
The
word that is formed is what Mom might become during her child’s birthday party
after “Happy Birthday” is sung, the wish is made, the candles are blown out…
and Dad sheepishly admits that his smart phone malfunctioned (or his camera
jammed).
What is this word, and what are the two words associated with “drops”?
Every Friday at
Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! we publish a new menu of fresh word puzzles, number
puzzles, logic puzzles, puzzles of all varieties and flavors. We cater to
cravers of scrumptious puzzles!
Our master chef, Grecian gourmet puzzle-creator Lego Lambda, blends and bakes up mysterious (and sometimes questionable) toppings and spices (such as alphabet soup, Mobius bacon strips, diced snake eyes, cubed radishes, “hominym” grits, anagraham crackers, rhyme thyme and sage sprinklings.)
Please post
your comments below. Feel free also to post clever and subtle hints that do not
give the puzzle answers away. Please wait until after 3 p.m. Eastern Time on
Tuesdays to post your answers and explain your hints about the puzzles. We
serve up at least one fresh puzzle every Friday.
We invite you to make it a habit to “Meet at Joe’s!” If you enjoy our weekly
puzzle party, please tell your friends about Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! Thank
you.