Friday, July 29, 2016

Lead foot meets metal floorboard; Talking heads on four legs; Branding a second fiddle; Try licking these kitchen spoonerisms; Hickory dickory doc, and please iron my lab frock; Goeth, Pride… Olympialackadaisical

P! SLICES: OVER (pe)3 – (e4 + p3) SERVED

Welcome to our July 29th edition of Joseph Young’s Puzzleria!

Mark Scott of Seattle (also known as skydiveboy) has been generously and regularly sharing his wonderful puzzles with us since his debut poser in the summer of 2014 (see his Guest French Chef Slice”). This week, Mark contributes his latest “beaut of a baffler” which appears immediately beneath our main MENU. It is titled “Prescription Description Slice: Hickory dickory doc, and please iron my lab frock.”

Our pretty darn deep gratitude, Mark.

Also on our menus this week, along with a quintet of messy culinary Riffing/Ripping Off Shortz Slices, are:
1 Hors d’Oeuvre exploring what the Jamaican bobsled team is up to these days;
1 hearty, heady Mongrel Morsel requiring the use of an “I-dropper”;
1 relatively tough Appetizer requiring Einsteinian genius and speed-of-light wits (be sure to keep them about you!); and
2 Desserts: one, Rozellean; and another, just one heartbeat away from being the main course.
 
So, go see your doc, have your head examined, get your “eye” dropped. Keep your heart beating, your wits whetted, and your bobsled runners waxed. 
And, as always, enjoy!

Hors d’Oeuvre Menu

Bobslacking Easy As Pie Hors d’Oeuvre:
Olympialackadaisical
 
The Jamaican bobsled team is in Brazil, training hard for the Rio Olympics. (Hey, if it is now winter in Brazil, these must be the Winter Olympics! Am I right?)

The coach notices, however, that one of the pushers on his four-man crew appears to be lollygagging – goldbricking, as it were, rather than “going for the gold.” Indeed the pusher seems to be merely going through the motions… and in slow motion at that.

So the coach pulls this bobsledding slacker aside and says just three words to him. The sluggish sledder, crestfallen, retreats to the Olympic Village, packs his bags and books a flight back to Jamaica.

The words the coach spoke sound like the name of something, in two words, that has been lately much in the news.

What did the coach say?

Morsel Menu

Mongrel Morsel:
Talking heads on four legs

Take a somewhat obscure 4-syllable term for many of the “talking heads” seen on TV and the internet lately. Interchange the two letters flanking the fourth letter. Apply an “I-dropper” to the fourth letter. The result is a 3-syllable American regional term for mongrel dog which is sometimes used as a pejorative term for “two-legged animals”… such as many of those “talking TV heads,” for example.

What are these two terms?
Hint: The last part of the term for many of the talking heads is a slang synonym for “heart.”

Appetizer Menu

E Equals Emcee Ell-Sevened Appetizer:
Lead foot meets metal floorboard

Treat the first two letters of a word as if they were the numbers they somewhat resemble. Treat the remainder of the letters in the word, in order, as a common abbreviation. 

Such a numerical/abbreviated “translation” of the word yields an expression that seems to contradict the word’s connotations of “life in the fast lane” and “pedal-to-the-metal” energy and vigor.
 
What is this word? What is the numerical/abbreviated expression it yields?

MENU

Prescription Description Slice:
Hickory dickory doc, and please iron my lab frock

Think of an order, in 14 letters, that is not uncommon for a doctor to prescribe to a woman. Now, by simply changing the position of the space(s), and without changing the order of any of the letters, name a profession a man might seek. Both the prescription and the profession are more common to the last century, but also apply today. Said aloud, both of these sound the same, but are very different in meaning. Can you name them?

Quintet Unapologetic Of Riffing/Ripping Off Shortz Slices:
Try licking these kitchen spoonerisms

Will Shortz’s July 24th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle reads:
A spoonerism is an interchange of initial consonant sounds in a phrase to get another phrase, as in “light rain” and “right lane.”
Name something seen in a kitchen in two words. Its spoonerism is an article that is worn mostly by men. What is it?
Note #1: Puzzleria!’s definition of “spoonerism” for the puzzles below is a bit broader than Will Shortz’s definition (although not as broad as in many dictionary definitions). In particular, our definition includes what we call “Mobius Spoonerisms” or “One-Sided Spoonerisms,” in which one of the two words (or syllables) to be spoonerized does not have an initial consonant sound, as in “art deco” and “dart echo” or “overrate” and “Rover ate.”
Note #2: Puzzles ONE and FOUR involve instances of “G-dropping” – that is, pronouncing “hoping” as “hopin,’” for instance. 

Puzzleria!’s “Quintet Unapologetic Of Riffing/Ripping Off Shortz Slices” reads:

ONE. Name something seen in a kitchen in two words. Its spoonerism is a two word phrase for the probable result of hiring an incompetent electrician. What is it, and what is the probable result?

TWO. Name something seen in a kitchen in two words. Its spoonerism is a 2-word phrase for a driver of a vehicle who leans heavily on his horn while weaving his way through a crowd of protestors. What is it, and what is the driver called?
Hint: The first word of “something seen in the kitchen” is a brand name.

THREE.
A. Name the title of an author’s debut novel, in two 1-syllable words. Insert a 1-syllable word between the two parts of its spoonerism and say the result aloud, naming a North American native mammal weighing about 3 pounds.
The word you inserted is a homophone of a synonym of “novel.”
What is the title, and what is the mammal? 
B. Name the title of the same author’s second novel, in one 2-syllable word. The spoonerism of its syllables, forming two 1-syllable words, if spoken aloud sounds like a possible caption for the image pictured at the right.
What is the title, and what is the caption?
C. Name the title of the same author’s third novel, in one 2-syllable word. The spoonerism of its syllables forms a word, if spoken aloud, sounds like the name of a land mentioned in half of the first half-dozen books of the Hebrew Scriptures.
What is the title, and what is the name of the biblical land?

FOUR. Name something seen in a kitchen in two words. Its 2-word spoonerism might go, in part, something like this…
Little Lego, Scripps Finalist: “…Can you give me the part of speech, Dr. Bailly?”
Dr. Bailly: “It is a noun, but can also be a verb.”
Little Lego: “Are there alternative pronunciations?”
Dr. Bailly: “I just have the one.”
Little Lego: “May I have the definition?”
Dr. Bailly: “It is something impossible or inaccessible. Also, as a verb it means ‘to spend time in idle reverie.’ ”
Little Lego: “May I have the language of origin?”
Dr. Bailly: “Middle English, by way of Latin from a Greek root.”
Little Lego: “Can you use it in a sentence, please?”
Dr. Bailly: “So enamored of Todd was Lisa that she tended to ____ away every third-hour study hall dreaming of his darling dimples.” (Finalists and audience chuckle.)
Little Lego: “Are there any other definitions?
Dr. Bailly: “I have: a translucent spot on old porcelain. Also, it’s a part of the fingernail.”
Little Lego: “____, _ _ _ _. ____.”
Dr. Bailly: That is correct, Lego.”
What is the something seen in the kitchen. What is its spoonerism?

FIVE. Name something seen in a kitchen in two words. Its 2-word spoonerism is what those who use this kitchen item may do – especially if they use it to eat an omelet, for example (or egg foo young!).
What is this kitchen item, and what may those who use it do?

Dessert Menu
 
Rozellean Dessert:
Goeth, Pride…

_ _ _ _   _ _ _ _ _ _ _: “_  _ _ _ _.”

This 16-letter phrase concerns person very lately in the news. The person is indicated by the 4-and-7-letter words at the left of the colon. The words in quotation marks are those he might have yelled out (in English) as the news-making incident occurred.

Rearrange those 16 letters to form a statement:
“_ _ _ _ _ _ _  is  a  _ _ _ _ _ _.”
(Three of the 16 letters are the I, S and A in “is a”)

In the NFL, this has always been a false statement. The unusual 7-letter first name of the stellar wide receiver (the 7 blanks that begin the statement) never played for the NFL team (whose 6-letter nickname concludes the statement). The wide receiver was, however, a Ram, Colt, Redskin and Bronco.
 
The statement is true, however, if you consider the unusual 7-letter first name as the title name of an aquatic star of a 1960’s TV series, and if you change the 6-letter nickname that concludes the statement to the 7-letter nickname of an NFL team in a bordering state (although, in the context of the NFL and not the TV series, the statement would still be false because the stellar wide receiver never played for the team in the bordering state either).

What are the words that might have been said by a person very lately in the news, and who might have said them?

One Heartbeat Away Dessert:
Branding a second fiddle

Name a 7-letter brand of a product you might purchase if you are feeling under the weather. 

Replace the sixth letter with duplicates of the second and third letters. Replace the third letter with a consonant, place a space after it, and add a vowel at the very end of this 8-letter result to form the 9-letter name of a U.S. vice-president.

Who is this vice-president and what is the brand name?

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 Wednesdays 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.

Friday, July 22, 2016

Slithery, simmering synonyms; Shouts of one syllable department; 1 goober + 7 high-hanging drupes plucked from an upper branch; Back-gamin’; Making neo-coms from retro-coms; The invisible man vs. the divisible non-human!

P! SLICES: OVER (pe)3 – (e4 + p3) SERVED

Welcome to our July 22nd edition of Joseph Young’s Puzzleria!

Our featured puzzle this week is a clever “sitcom conundrum” by Puzzlerian! patjberry. It appears under our main MENU and is titled “Sit Like A Couch Spud Slice:
Making neo-coms from retro-coms.”
Thank you, Patrick.
Also on our MENU this week is an octet (eight, count ‘em, eight!) of Riffing/Ripping Off Shortz puzzles… plus, on our other menus:
1 Hors d’Oeuvre involving winners that gloat and “rub it in”;
1 Mysterious Morsel that slithers and simmers;
1 Appetizing creation, quite divisible, with labyrinths and joyousness for all; and
1 Dessert that defies conventional wisdom… and embraces unconventional “quizdom.”

So, join in the fun. Keep enjoying your July with our jam-packed jambalaya of labyrinths.

Hors d’Oeuvre Menu

Celebrating Overthrows Of Opponents Hors d’Oeuvre:
Back-gamin’

Name an indoor sport that is known by a more common name. Spell the less common name backward and divide it in two to describe – in two words, a verb and noun – how participants in another indoor sport might celebrate a tournament victory.

What are the less common and more common names of the indoor sport? How do participants celebrate a tournament victory in the other indoor sport? 

Morsel Menu

Homographic Enigma Morsel:
Slithery, simmering synonyms

Name a word beginning with an A that is associated with the word “slither.” Name another word beginning with an S that is associated, figuratively, with the word “simmer.”

Each of the words has a homograph. (Homographs are words that are spelled the same but which have different meanings.) The homographs of these two words are synonyms of each other.

What are these two words?

Appetizer Menu

Creature Feature Appetizer:
The invisible man vs. the divisible non-human!

Note: In order to solve this puzzle, you must assign numeric values to the 26 letters of the alphabet: A = 1,  = 2, C = 3,… Z = 26 (see image below).

Name a three-word movie title in which the title character is a large creature. Ignore the first word, an adjective. Concentrate instead on the second and third words, which are the first and last names of the creature.

All numbers corresponding to the first five letters in the creature’s name are evenly divisible by a number greater than 1. All numbers corresponding to the remaining three letters in the creature’s name (sixth, seventh and eighth letters) are evenly divisible by a different number greater than 1.

What is this movie title?

Hint: There was a remake of the movie, using the same title.

MENU

Sit Like A Couch Spud Slice:
Making neo-coms from retro-coms

Name a popular 1980’s-1990’s sitcom with a one-word title.
Change the double-vowel that appears in the title to one different vowel. Change a third vowel in the title to a different vowel. Change the letter following that third vowel – a consonant and common abbreviation – to the letter that is its opposite abbreviation. For example, R (Republican) and D (Democratic) are “opposite abbreviations.”
 
The result, if you’ve done everything correctly, is the surname of a well-known 1970’s sitcom family. The consonants in this surname, along with the “double-vowel” (but with its vowels reversed) that appeared in the 1980’s-1990’s sitcom title can be rearranged to form a popular 1990’s-2000’s sitcom title.

What are these two sitcom titles? What is the sitcom surname?

Octet Of Riffing/Ripping Off Shortz And Bass Slices:
1 goober + 7 high-hanging drupes plucked from an upper branch

Will Shortz’s July 17th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Ben Bass of Chicago, reads:
Name a prominent American politician – first and last names, 11 letters total. Rearrange these letters, and you’ll get a country plus the former name of a former country. Who’s the politician, and what countries are these?

Puzzleria!’s “Septet Of Ripping Off Shortz And Bass Slices” reads:

ONE. Name a prominent Midwestern American politician who is a former governor and presidential candidate – first and last names, 11 letters total. Rearrange these letters, and you’ll get a two-word phrase – in 4 and 7 letters – that prompted Bill Russell of the Boston Celtics to ask for, and receive, an annual salary of $100,001 in 1965. Who is the politician and what is this two-word phrase?

TWO. Name a prominent Northeastern American politician – first and last names, 11 letters total. Rearrange these letters, and you’ll get two words: a body part of one of the characters in a classic Coppertone poster, and another word (a “descriptive noun”) for the critter that is exposing that body part. Who is the politician and what are these two words?
 
THREE. Name a prominent Northeastern American politician – first and last names, 12 letters total. Rearrange these letters, and you’ll get a two-word phrase – in 7 and 5 letters – describing a self-possessed assurance that this politician, and others of her gender, aspire to cultivate. Who’s this politician, and what is the phrase?

FOUR. Name a prominent Southwestern American politician – first and last names, 9 letters total. Rearrange these letters, and you’ll get an appliance usually used in the bathroom. Who’s the politician, and what is the appliance?
Hint: The appliance is sometimes written as one word, but it is also sometimes written as two words (in 4 and 5 letters) or as a hyphenated word.

FIVE. Name a prominent Midwestern American politician – first and last names, 10 letters total. Rearrange these letters, and you’ll get a type of 1960s-era demonstration – in 3 and 7 letters – that this politician was likely not a part of. Who is this politician, and what is this demonstration?
Hint: Such demonstrations involved ashcans, but it is unclear whether they involved actual ashes (which has been reported anecdotally, but not actually confirmed). 
 
SIX. Name a prominent Midwestern American politician – first and last names, in 10 letters. Add to these letters the first letter appearing after the opening parenthesis that is often is placed directly after the last name, for a total of 11 letters. Change an O in the name to a U and rearrange these letters, and you’ll get the first and last names of a member of a potential First Family. Who’s the politician, and what is the name of the First Family member?

SEVEN. Name a prominent Midwestern American politician – first and last names, 9 letters total. Remove an N from the name and arrange these letters, and you’ll get a two-word description of what the politician might have been in the late-1950s. Who’s the politician, and what is the description?
   
EIGHT. Name a prominent Midwestern American politician – first and last names, 12 letters total. Rearrange these letters, and you’ll get a two-word description – a 4-letter adjective and 8-letter noun – of a rancid condiment a restaurant patron has just poured over her Caesar salad. Now Re-rearrange the 12 letters to describe a remedy lacking in social refinement that the patron employs in an effort to rid the rancid aftertaste from her mouth. The remedy consists of a 4-letter adjective and 8-letter gerund.
Who is this politician? What is the rancid condiment? What is the impolite remedy the patron employs?

Dessert Menu
 
Conventional Quizdom Dessert:
Shouts of one syllable department

Name collective shouts that might be heard at a political convention, in one syllable. Name collective shouts – also in one syllable – that might be heard a few seconds following the initial shouts.

The initial shouts sound like the plural form of a part of the human body – they are homophones. The secondary shouts sound like the first part of a two-syllable adjective of or pertaining to a body part very near the first body parts.

What are the two shouts? What are the body parts?

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 Wednesdays 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.

Friday, July 15, 2016

New vowel, same old dead end; Can you bank on who’s your caddy? Identical triplets on Tripoli’s shores; Condensed plot summary; Doobie doobie double refer madness; 20,000 major leagues under the C-notes; Snippet in the bud; Name’s the same? No, name’s the “synoname”

P! SLICES: OVER (pe)3 – (e4 + p3) SERVED

Welcome to our July 15th edition of Joseph Young’s Puzzleria!

Along with a trio of Ripping Off Shortz puzzles, we feature also this week:
1 Hors d’Oeuvre involving bogus internet chatter;
1 Morsel involving, paradoxically, de-hyphenation;
1 Slice featuring a short story James Thurber ought to have written; and
2 Desserts, – one presenting a triple-linked chain (smoking) of “reeference,” and the other dealing with people on radio talk shows, and TV reality and game shows like “Let’s Make a Deal!

Enjoy, please, this week’s Ripping, Riffing and Reefering!

Hors d’Oeuvre Menu

Internet Chatter Hors (Inside, Really) d’Oeuvre:
Snippet in the bud

The following snippet of bogus internet “chatter” was obtained by hacking into international email accounts. Were it real, the snippet might well have been monitored and analyzed by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS): 

Marine airmen remain in Iran. Me? I, an emir, re-arm. Marine airmen are mine, man.


The DHS analysts would have noted that the words of the snippet possess a quality that is somewhat unusual. What is this quality?

Ripping Off Shortz And Martin Eiger Hors d’Oeuvre:
“20,000 major leagues under the C-notes”

Will Shortz’s July 10th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Martin Eiger, reads:
Think of a phrase that denotes a particular major-league sports team in 12 letters. The first 6 letters are the same as the second 6 letters rearranged. What team is it?

Puzzleria!’s “Ripping Off Shortz And Martin Eiger Hors d’Oeuvre” reads:
Think of a particular major-league sports team in 12 letters. The first 5 letters form an approximate rhyme of a word that is somewhat synonymous with the word spelled by the last 6 letters. What team is it?

Morsel Menu

Half-Backwards Associations Morsel:
New vowel, same old dead end



Name a word associated with dead ends and closure. Replace its first vowel with a different vowel, then de-hyphenate the word… oops, that should be dehyphenate the word.

Split the result into two equal parts and spell the second part backward to form a two-word phrase associated with apparent dead ends that might lead to welcome closure pending discovery of further information.

What are this word and phrase?

Appetizer Menu

Riffing Off Shortz And Martin Appetizer:
Name’s the same? No, name’s the “synoname”

Think of the original nicknames of two major-league sports franchises, 6 letters each. (The franchise associated with one of nicknames, changed the nickname to a different one, which it currently uses.) The teams are based in the same metro area and play the same sport, and the original nicknames are synonyms of each other. The second and sixth letters of one nickname are identical to the second and sixth letters of the other nickname. The third, fourth and fifth letters of one nickname are the same as the corresponding letters of the other nickname, but rearranged.

The nicknames’ initial letters have alphanumeric values (see chart) that add to 27. That is, the two letters are equidistant from the ends of the alphabet, or from the midpoint of the alphabet.
(For example, A (1) + Z (26) = 27, B (2) + Y (25) = 27, …M (13) + N (14) = 27.)
What are these two professional teams?
Hint: The beginning sounds of both teams’ current nicknames are the same.

MENU

Iceboxing Lord Kelvinator Slice:
Condensed plot summary

Didn’t James Thurber write a story about a statuesque, wed-newly honeymooning fashion model who tried daubing dry (using her sundress while in a state of undress!) her hubby’s limited-edition Piet Mondrian print which became saturated with condensation after she taped it to the Kelvinator fridge at their fleabag motel?

Exactly one-seventh of the words in the above plot synopsis share a somewhat unusual quality in common.
(As you count the words, note well that hyphenated words, such as “limited-edition,” count as one.)

Hint: Two of the one-seventh of the words are slightly different from – and more “elegant” than – the others worthy of being included in the elite one-seventh of the total words.
Hint: Thirty letters are involved in the solution of this puzzle.

Riffing Off Shortz And Martin Slice:
Identical triplets on Tripoli’s shores

Think of a particular major-league sports team. Name one player – not one particular player but rather a generic player – on the team, in 13 letters. Remove four letters – all but the first three, middle three and last three letters – from this name. This leaves three identical “triplets” – three 3-letter segments – which, taken together, smack of a historical war movie released during the Vietnam era.

Name the generic team player and the movie.   

Dessert Menu
 
Chain Of Reference Dessert:
Doobie doobie double refer madness

Bruce Springsteen’s song “Thunder Road” contains the lyric, “Like a vision she dances across the porch as the radio plays Roy Orbison singing for the lonely.”

In “RunningDown a Dream” Tom Petty sings, “Me and Del were singing a little ‘Runaway’…”

The Traveling Wilburys (which, coincidentally, included Roy Orbison and Tom Petty as bandmates), in “The End of the Line,” sing, “Maybe somewhere down the road a ways you’ll think of me and wonder where I am these days, maybe somewhere down the road when someone plays ‘Purple Haze.’”
 
Songs such as these – those that refer to other songs and/or artists in their lyrics – are rather uncommon. But even more uncommon is a song with lyrics that refer to a second song that has lyrics that refer to a third song, thereby forming a kind of “triple-song-link chain of reference”?

What are these three songs?


Wed-Newlies Dessert:
Can you bank on who’s your caddy?

 Find a two-word caption for the image presented here – a four-letter word followed by a five-letter word.

Rearrange the letters to a form a name of a person (first and last names) who has very recently been making news headlines.

What is the caption, and who is the news maker?


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 Wednesdays 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.