PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 3(7!) SERVED
Schpuzzle of the Week:
An uncommon Common Era occurrence
uncommon property.)
Can you name the other 27 years that share this property?
What will be the next year that shares this property?
Appetizer Menu
Auld Lang Syne Language Appetizer:
HappyCrypticNewCrosswordYear!
Here are the links to Patrick’s seventeen previous cryptic crosswords on Puzzleria! Each is a cryptic masterpiece!
ONE TWO THREE FOUR FIVE SIX SEVEN
EIGHT NINE TEN ELEVEN TWELVE THIRTEEN
FOURTEEN FIFTEEN SIXTEEN SEVENTEEN
For those of you who may be new to cryptic crossword puzzles, Patrick has compiled a few basic cryptic crossword puzzle instructions regarding the Across and Down clues and their format:The number in parentheses at the end of each clue tells how many letters are in the answer.
Multiple numbers in parentheses indicate how letters are distributed in multiple-word answers.
For example, (6) simply indicates a six-letter answer like “jalopy,” (5,3) indicates a five-and-three-letter answer like “cargo van,” and (5-5) indicates a five-and-five-letter hyphenated answer like “Rolls-Royce.”
For further insight about how to decipher these numbered cryptic clues, see Patrick’s “Cryptic Crossword Tutorial” in this link to his November 17, 2017 cryptic crossword.
The Tutorial appears below the grid that contains the answers in that edition of Puzzleria!
And now, here are Patrick’s New Year’s clues:
ACROSS
4. Turned down fan in rush(8)
8. Married woman’s bitterness(6)
9. Philosophical sort needs help carrying box(8)
10. Football players with name in underwear?(8)
11. Not against dull arrangement?(6)
12. Carmen, for example—having lost love, dead inside, looking for shelter(8)
13. It’s a part of France, guys(8)16. Clark Kent, for example, has to change costume, ultimately, then leave(5,3)
19. Rocky runs right off before meal(8)
21. Eager to put paintings around room?(6)23. Informed journalists getting close to you, Tom?(8)
24. None left? Good!(3,5)
25. “Tapestry” band felt naked?(6)
26. Fighting broadcast live once?(8)
DOWN
1. S-spooky nature walk?(7)
2. Talk, dance music, and rock? Sure!(9)
4. Aristotle unsure about the whole shooting match?(7,8)
5. Fail to let go, hanging onto past(8)
6. Just bringing in large gift(5)
14. Mother in control, hard to leave school(4,5)
15. Writer shot inside brown government building(8)
17. Rock singer(7)
18. One in bed getting a little shuteye has to go to the bathroom regularly(7)20. One captivated by clues going with flow?(6)
22. Join troubled loner(5)
MENU
Pandemocrazy Slice:
Dropping the ball as multitudes fall
The letters AOC stand for Age Of Consent or for New York politician Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
What phrase heard lately in the news does AOC also stand for?
Hint: The phrase is usually preceded by the article “an.”
Riffing Off Shortz And Curren Slices:
Minding one’s peas and cues
Will Shortz’s December 27th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by David Curren of Arlington, Massachusetts, reads:Think of a familiar two-word phrase in 5 and 2 letters. Replace the last letter with the next letter of the alphabet. The result will be a palindrome (the seven letters will read
backward and forward the same). What phrase is it?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Curren Slices read:
ENTREE #1
Take a five-letter word for an ancient Celtic priest or sayer of sooth, and a six-letter word for where he may hang out (see accompanying image).
Rearrange these eleven letters to name a puzzle-maker, first and last names.
Who is this puzzle-maker?
What is the priest and his hangout?
ENTREE #2
Think of a two-word phrase, in three and six letters, that one might use to describe “The Pleasure Bond” by Masters & Johnson, “Sexual Behavior in the Human Male” by Alfred Kinsey and “Dr. Ruth’s Guide for Married Lovers” by Dr. Ruth Westheimer.
Replace the antepenultimate (third-last) letter in the phrase with the a letter you might see next to it on clothing labels.
The resulting nine letters will read backward and forward the same. What phrase is it?
ENTREE #3
Think of a two-word response, in two and five letters, that Pete Dionisopoulos, proprietor of the Saturday Night Live Olympia Restaurant, might blurt out to a customer who orders hot chocolate.
Replace the last letter of the response with the letter thirteen places ahead in the alphabet (Rot13).
The result will read the same backward and forward.
What phrase is it?
ENTREE #4
Think of a compound word that is a familiar household fixture, in seven letters.Replace the second letter with a letter that is a homophone of a pronoun.
The result will read the same backward and forward. What word is it?
ENTREE #5
Take the third-most-common of sixteen different ways to spell a particular holiday, in seven letters.
Replace the third letter with the letter three places earlier in the alphabet.
The result will read the same backward and forward. What holiday is it?
ENTREE #6
Think of a familiar proper place name, in seven letters.Replace the second letter with the next letter of the alphabet.
The result will read the same backward and forward.
What place name is it?
Hint: The name contains four letters that are the same. Remove two of them and replace them with just a single “d” and rearrange to result to spell a Greek letter.
ENTREE #7
Think of an non-hyphenated compound adjective, in nine letters, that means “unfailing or reliable, as a method or plan, for example.”
Its fourth and sixth letters are abbreviations for two very common opposite words.
Replace the sixth letter with a duplicate of the fourth letter.
The result will read the same backward and forward.
What adjective is this?
ENTREE #8
Think of the first name of a U.S. president that was also the first name on the birth certificates of a “Dustbowl singer/songwriter,” a big band clarinetist and a country singer nicknamed “Red.”Replace the third letter with the letter three places later in the alphabet.
The result will read the same backward and forward.
What first name is it?
ENTREE #9Think of a geometrical shape in seven letters. Replace the third letter with the letter seven places earler in the alphabet.
The result will read the same backward and forward.
What shape is this?
ENTREE #10
Think of a word you might see while perusing your spice rack, in eight letters.
Replace the fourth letter with the letter five places later in the alphabet.
The result will read the same backward and forward.
What word is it?
ENTREE #11
Think of something for which rodents are infamous, in 7 letters. Replace the fifth letter (a vowel) with a different vowel.
The result will read the same backward and forward.For what are pesky rodents famous?
Hint: Etymologists have an advantage in solving this puzzle.
Dessert Menu
Amen Corner Dessert:
Caption, capital and capitalization
Name a world capital and its country.
Rearrange the combined letters of the capital and country to spell a three-word caption for the vintage image pictured here.
The three words are:
1. an adjective describing something associated with a bygone era,
2. a capitalized proper noun, and
3. a noun that is more commonly used as an adjective.
What are the capital and country?
What is the caption?
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.
Happy 2021, all!
ReplyDeleteSo far, got all the Entrées.
Note: The HINT in Entrée #6 should read "one of them" not "two of them."
You beat me to it, geo! I have all the Entrees, also....they were fairly easy, thus fun, this time.
ReplyDeleteI can't say the same for the Schpuzzle OR Dessert. I think we need more info (word lengths, first letters, perhaps) for the latter. I tried about four numerical ideas for the Schpuzzle, none of which led anywhere useful.
I picked some absurdly scientific phrase for the AOC appetizer, but I doubt it could be correct.
Good riddance to 2020, hindsight is terrible.
ReplyDeleteOn the to-do list for 2021 is to teach Lego how easy it is to turn a puzzle into a pdf, and then put that into a Google Doc for all to download.
I could never do a PJB cryptic looking at a screen, but I can (and did) solve this printed pdf version.
Another treat, at first I thought 25A was clever, then I thought it wasn't, and then I realized it was. Perhaps that sounds unkind?
I must admit, ecoarchitect, that printed pdf version of Patrick's Cryptic Crossword is really really nice!
DeleteLegoWhoNotesThatThe"TapestryBand"ComprisedCurtisAmyOnfluteDavidCampbellOnCelloAndViolaTerryKingOnCelloAndTenorSaxophoneDannyKortchmarOnAcousticGuitarCongaAndElectricGuitarRussKunkelOnDrumCharles"Charlie"LarkeyOnBassGuitarAndStringBassJoelO'BrienOnDrumsRalphSchuckettOnElectricPianoBarrySocherOnViolinTenorSaxophoneAndViolaPerrySteinbergOnBassGuitarViolinTenorSaxophoneAndStringBassAndJamesTaylorOnAcousticGuitar
I've been working my way through old Atlantic Monthly cryptic crosswords, created by the great Henry Rathvon and Emily Cox (aka HEX). 13D in the one I'm working on now is a funny coincidence.
DeleteIt was from these that I became reasonably efficient in reformatting into Word documents, and thence to pdf's.
Interesting that in cryptic clues (posed by the likes of Henry, Emily and Patrick) and in Rebus clues (posed by the likes of Ecoarchitect) negative, destructive and generally discombobulative words (such as "degenerate," for example) are used to tip the solver off that a "letter rearrangement" is in the offing.
DeleteThus "to T.S. Eliot, a" degenerates into "It's Too Late."
LegoWhoMuses:"OrPerhapsViceVersa"
Thanks Eco.
ReplyDeleteWe're having New Year's fun solving these now! Thank you, Joseph Young for your fantastic Puzzleria!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Eileen, and New Year's greetings to you. It gives me great joy to know you are enjoying Puzzleria! as you are ringing in 2021. Here's hoping, and praying, that it will be a wonderful year for all of us.
DeleteLegoLangSyne
Thank you, Joseph Young! You are wonderful and very appreciated. Wishing all the very best to you this New Year and always!
DeleteHappy New Year's Eve, everybody!
ReplyDeleteI hope y'all enjoy my latest cryptic crossword, and I have to say to ecoarchitect, if you're the one who put my puzzle in the PDF format, nice job! I will say, though, whenever the Guardian website does it, I can't solve it. Not interactive, and usually they make it a jigsaw puzzle or alphabetize the clues. Either way, it's tougher than usual to solve. I just stick to the usual 15×15 grid, and I promise to do so with my own creations here. I thought 25A was totally fair, but I don't think eco is being unkind. Feel free to offer any constructive criticism that should come to mind. I like to know others on the blog care enough to comment when necessary. And apparently, like Lego, I never even mentioned Carole King in the "Tapestry Band". But it's not really about her, obviously, although I'm sure she played piano occasionally(to say nothing of her singing and writing the songs in the first place).
Tonight, Mom and I have been watching a few shows recapping 2020, and having chicken spaghetti for supper. Mom also went to get some groceries earlier. We were desperately out of snacks. Also, overnight tonight we're supposed to have some bad weather, but I hope we can sleep through the worst of it. Pray for us.
Now to the first puzzles of the new year. Of course, I am exempt from solving my own cryptic, so here's what else I've solved so far:
The Pandemocrazy Slice(I think)
All Entrees(just got the SNL one)
I trust there will be some good hints for the others coming with the new year. I'm guessing 2021 is the first year to possess its property since 1920, but that's only a wild guess. Again, I'd like to wish you all a Happy New Year, and may we all have good health, happiness, and prosperity in 2021(as well as a COVID vaccine available for all us average folk!). Until we meet again on the other side, I wish you all good luck and good solving, please stay safe, and WEAR THOSE MASKS! Cranberry out(with the old)!
pjbLookingForwardTo2020BeingSoFarAway
I confess to making the pdf, I can do a simple crossword on the screen, like an easier WaPo or NYT, but I almost always need to scribble things down to solve a cryptic. Making that version is pretty quick, less than 10 minutes.
DeleteAs to 25A, I wasn't complaining, I was making cryptic humor, with any luck on three levels, including a homophone. Explanation next Wednesday.
One more thing: cryptics from the British papers are exceedingly difficult, I rarely get more than half of the Guardian, Times of London, etc.
DeleteThe Nation magazine used to have weekly cryptics, they made the economic choice to end that, and the writers (Kosman and Picciotto) have a website at https://www.patreon.com/leftfieldcryptics/posts, $3/ month to subscribe. They follow a similar format to Cranberry's, they email a new puzzle every Thursday morning, and give their insights about creating puzzles. A few weeks ago they addressed the search for describing words, like degenerate that Lego mentioned.
What is chicken spaghetti??
DeletePlantsmith,
DeleteI had never heard of chicken spaghetti either.
(I thought it might have been something like chicken meat pressed into thin spaghetti-like strips to make it resemble spaghetti or some other pasta form.)
LegoA.K.A."JohnPaulSpaghetti"
Oh like raddiotore pasta? Little radiators - so pasta in the shape of little chickens?
Delete"Little-chicken-shaped pasta!"
Delete"Gallini?"
"Pullini?"
LegoWhoThinksPlantsmithMayBeAMarketingGenius!
Isn't it chicken tetrazzini? I don't know where chicken spaghetti appears (in pjb's Cryptic?), but I thought I'd weigh in.
DeleteI like Gallini. Orechiette are little ears. It looks delicious more like chicken alfredo in the pict. So it could be Gallini alafredo. I am getting hungry now.
DeleteNever heard of chicken spaghetti? You northerners have so much to learn.
Delete- former border state resident
To the marketing idea, sorry, someone beat you to it. Annie's (4 blocks from my office) makes a rabbit shaped pasta. But we've got rooters for the rooster.
It is in his narrative above. Ok how about this. My mom would refry day old spaghetti in butter till it got a little crispy. I thought it was delicious, but she was the only one i know of that ever did this. Spaghetti refrito?
DeleteI think I've actually done that myself, too, PT (is that the abbrev we have settled on?)...maybe PTS or PH would be better?....although not very often. But I can taste it in my imagination, so I am pretty sure I've tried it.
DeleteI vote for PT.
DeletePTS is too long and I (being formerly involved in pH metrology) would have a hard time typing PH and not pH.
It is merely spaghetti with pieces of chicken mixed in. As for the PT problem, I merely mistyped last time, and didn't check it before publishing. Plantsmith should, of course, always be PS for short.
DeletepjbSuggestsInThisCaseAOCStandsForAccidentOfCourse
Well it sounds really good. But is there also a chicken tettrazini- because i thought it was turkey tettrazini?
DeleteAS to tetrazzini (two z's, not two t's), here a chick, there a chick, everywhere a chick, chick. (As opposed to turk, turk)
DeleteSome alternate timely solutions to the AOC Slice:
ReplyDeleteAssault On (the) Constitution
Alliance Of Conspirators
Acquiescence Of Congress
America On Coronavirus
American Oligarchic Capitalism
Ascendancy Of China
Happy 2021, guys!
Funny.Also America on Crack.
DeleteI love "Assault on (the) Constitution!!"
DeleteLet's hope that soon, America Obliterates Coronavirus.
DeleteI need one more letter for the Dessert to work, but i could be going down another rabbit hole.
ReplyDeleteThe last letter in the "adjective describing something associated with a bygone era" is not an "r." The adjective ends in a 3-letter place where a bear might hang out (not Chicago!).
DeleteLegoWhoIsPrettySureThatABearIsToBigOfAFitToGoDownARabbitHole
Oh yeah the bachelor pad.
DeleteA few more AOCs:
ReplyDeleteAll-Out Chaos
Abusive Old Crone
Acting On Camera
An Odd Couple
Apparently Off-Color
Assistant On Call
Angry Over Christmas
Accepting One's Consequences
American Oil Companies
Accurate Or Close
Albuquerque Or Cincinnati
Awkward Opening Comments
Adele's Oldies Collection
Adore Our Children
Anyone's Own Convenience
Awfully Overdone Chicken
Arduous Obstacle Course
Annie's Orphan Character
Always Obsessive-Compulsive
Actors Organizing Cast
All One Country
Avenge Our Creator
Acting Overly Coy
Arguably Outmoded Concept
All Over California
and how could I forget...
Alabama, Of Course
pjbRemindingYouCrypticsAren'tJustAnyOldCrosswords
I like All-Out Chaos, An Odd Couple, and Adore Our Children best.
DeleteA few more:
Alabama Or Clemson?
Auburn Or Clemson
Auburn Over Clemson
Alabama Over Clemson
Alabama Outscores Clemson
Auburn Outscores Clemson
Auburn Outruns Clemson
Alabama Outruns Clemson
Alabama Obliterates Clemson
etc. etc.
Acrostics Or Cryptics?
Atomic Or Crude?
Awfully Ornery Children
Arrest Our Congressmen
Arrested On Charges
Atlantic Or Caribbean?
Always Outperform Canada
American Overconsumption Crisis
America's Olympic Catastrophe
American Oil Consumption
Accounting Of Capital
Acquisition Of Capital
America Outspent China
Army Of Cicadas
Axes Outperform Chainsaws
Just as long as somebody beats Clemson.
DeletepjbComingUpWithAnOxymoronYouDidn't:AnOriginalCliche!
Abbott Or Costello?
DeletepjbWonderingWhoReallyIsOnFirst?
Attack On Command
DeleteArtists On Canvas
Ali Out Cold
An Obnoxious Creep
An Opportunistic Charlatan
Accused Of Collusion
Admitting Obvious Crimes
Assassination Or Coup?
Assist Our Customers
Ah, "Oh Calcutta"!
An Open Casket
Any Ordained Clergymen
Arguing Over Christianity
Age-Old Conundrum
Airplane Off Course
Anger Only Complicates
Actions Of Cowards
Alabama's Overly Conservative
Alabama's Obviously Conservative
An Obstinate Cretin
Average Or Common
An Orange Crush
Angry Old Couple
Accomplishments Of Cruciverbalists
Achievements Of Cruciverbalists
Articles Of Clothing
Awfully Old Clothes
Acting On Contact
Automobiles, Or "Cars"
Avoid Open Contact
Assume One's Cheating
Afraid Of Commitment
Ask Our Congressman
Art Of Compromise
Apprehended On COPS
Against Our Conditions
Accident Or Coincidence?
Always One Complaining
Awfully Offensive Comments
After One Cocktail
Acting Out Constantly
Advise Or Consent?
And/Or Choices
Abundance Of Crap
Agents Of CONTROL
pjbIsAllOut,Completely!
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteWhat was missing in NYC THursday evening: AVALANCHE OF CONFETTI. (Hope that's not already up there in the two long lists)
DeleteWow is this a pun fest? Apples or coconuts. You guys are creative.
ReplyDeleteor should i say Apples or cranberries?
ReplyDeleteAdvanced Oral Cancer
ReplyDeleteAdvanced Ovarian Cancer
Abolish Ovarian Cancer
Austrians Occupy Czechia
Argentines Occupy Chile
Americans Occupy Canada
Arabian Oil Crisis
Atlantic Ocean Corals
Atlantic Ocean Crisis
Arctic Ocean Commerce
Aggregated Octahedral Crystals
Aluminum Oxide Composite
Atlantic Ocean Currents
Arctic Ocean Countries
Arctic Ocean Commerce
Advanced Organic Chemistry [an actual typical university course]
Atmospheric Oxygen Chemistry
Atmospheric Ozone Chemistry
Aqueous Oxidation Criteria
Alsatian Oenological Conference
American Oncology Conference
Anodically Oxidized Copper
Aluminum Oxide = Corundum
Atomic Oxygen Chemistry
Acidic Oxidative Corrosion
Alkali Oxide Chemistry
Abolish Organic Chemistry
I fear that, by posting my innocent little "Dropping the ball as multitudes fall" puzzle, I have created a PUZZLE MONSTER!
DeleteLegoAnOgreishCoundfounder
What's a "coundfounder"?
DeletepjbIsConfoundedByLego'sChoiceOfWords
Oops. that should be "confounder, or "one who throws (the ogre) into confusion or perplexity."
DeleteThanks for finding fault In my "counfounding, cranberry, and bringing it to my attention.
LegoWhoSuggestsThatThisIsHowOneMightConfoundACat
Angels or cherubim?
ReplyDeleteAnts or centipedes?
Alligators or crocs?
Help me----...
Age of conspiracies.
ReplyDeleteAll over Clinton.
Allspice or cloves?
Appalachian Orogenic Collision [WordWoman would like this]
ReplyDeleteAxioms Of calculus
Andean Observational Complex [of radiotelescopes]
Aromatic Organic Compounds [benzene, furan, pyrrole, pyridine, ...]
Aliphatic Organic Compounds [ethane, propane, ...]
American Oceanographic Conference
Advanced Oceanographic Cartography
Adults Or Children?
ReplyDeleteAmerica's Ongoing Crises
Amorous Old Coot
Abundance Of Coleslaw
Asparagus Or Carrots?
Angry Old Codger
Amazing Opera Crescendo
Arrival Of Columbus
An Obscene Caller
Annoyingly Opinionated Clods
Artist's Oil Creations
Against One's Creed
Awfully Off-Center
Attorneys Offering Counsel
Admiring Other Comedians
Approach Others Cautiously
Avoid Opinionated Celebrities
After One's Caught
Apple Or Cherry?
Agile Or Clumsy?
Attitudes Often Change
Almost Over Coronavirus
Anybody Oughta Care
Are Olympics Cancelled?
Authors Offending Critics
Assessing Our Conversation
Acting Often Carelessly
Average Oedipus Complex
Anarchy On Campus
Appearance On Camera
All Others Considered
The following are actual AOC acronyms:
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain(English football player born 1993)
Aviation Officer Candidate
Aircraft Operations Center
Aircraft Operation Company
Air Operator's Certificate
Air Officer Commanding
Aeronautical operational control
Appellation d'origine controlee
Adelaide Ornithologists Club
Admiral Overseas Corporation
Akan Orthography Committee
Alianca Operario-Camponesa
Alliance Of Civilizations
Army Ordnance Corps
Arts Orange County
Association Of Colleges
Australian Olympic Committee
Active Optical Cable
Advice Of Charge
Antibody-Oligonucleotide Conjugate
Axiom Of Choice
Assimilable Organic Carbon
Anglican Orthodox Church
Ataturk Orman Ciftligi
Attestation Of Compliance
Age Of Calamity
pjbAdmitsIt'sAnOddCollection
Hey, today is palindromic: 1/2/21!
ReplyDeleteLegoWhoNotesThatNextDecemberShallBringABonanzaOfSimilarPalindomicDates!
Yes, 12/11/21 will be fun
DeleteOr 12/22/21
DeleteOr:
Delete12/1/21
12/2/21
12/3/21
12/4/21
12/5/21
12/6/21
12/7/21
12/8/21
12/9/21
LegoWhoObservesThat"12/3/21"IsAKindOfABellCurveDate
Only if dates are written in USA format.
DeleteThat certainly is An Odd Coincidence!
DeletepjbjpButItDoesn'tSpellAnything
Re the single digit dates above....I thought of those, but decided that the longer palindromes were a tad better.
DeleteAnd I love the 'bell curve' idea re today's date. No flattening the curve today!
Any more clues on the poster caption? Where is Tiger?
ReplyDeleteAs far as numerology goes - i know very little about composite letters.
"All our children" was a 2000 pilot that was supposed to be a spin off of the Soap "All my children." It did not make it-Alas.
For the Dessert, the last letters in the three caption words:
Delete1. an adjective describing something associated with a bygone era,
2. a capitalized proper noun, and
3. a noun that is more commonly used as an adjective...
are
1. n
2. a
3. c
LegoAddsThatTheThreeCaptionWordsContainFiveSevenAndSevenLetters
That explains why my attempts all failed -- I had been assuming that the last word was "green": it eminently fits the puzzle text.
DeleteGot it (Dessert) now.
DeleteI wonder if I've got the right words. I can't seem to find the world capital or country, and I've looked through about three different lists!
DeleteEstoy de acuerdo.
DeleteThe combined letters in two consecutive words in the title of this song can be rearranged to form the name of the country.
DeleteLegoWhoOnceDroveHisAccordAcrossA"Big"RuggedStretchOfCalifornia’sCentralCoastBetweenCarmelAndSanSimeon
Thank you so much, Joe! I obviously had the wrong third word, but I finally got it!
DeletepjbWould'veBeenWorkingOnItForHoursAndHours!
Geo---me too, re having had 'green' as the third word. I've just now come to P! and read the new Dessert hints, so I'm still on the warpath, trying to figure out that third word.
DeleteAH, finally on the Dessert. That was WAY more complicated (= LONG) than I had expected. NEVER would have gotten without these latest hints.
DeleteMe too.
DeleteThink I have the Schpuzzle.
ReplyDeleteHey crossword community! I thought this would be a good community to enlist some help. Do you have any recommendations for how we can improve our crossword database/solving tool: crosswordsolver.com
ReplyDeleteTIA!!!
TIA. Transient Ischemic Attack? Not a good thing.
DeleteThanks In Advance!
DeleteI'm surprised so far no one has thought of the Ace Of Clubs as a possible AOC acronym.
ReplyDeletepjbThinkingIt'sJustNotInTheCardsForUs
Oh yeah, that should have been an obvious one!
DeleteI haven't located any SCHPUZZLE hints in the long posts above....there aren't any yet, right?
ReplyDeleteVT - That is a prime concern.
DeleteSchpuzzle hint:
DeleteCentury 1: 8 hits
Century 2: 1 hit
Century 3: 1 hit
Century 4: 1 hit
Century 5: 1 hit
Century 6: 1 hit
Century 7: 1 hit
Century 8: 1 hit
Century 10: 1 hit
Century 11: 1 hit
Century 12: 1 hit
Century 13: 2 hits
Century 14: 1 hit
Century 15: 1 hit
Century 16: 1 hit
Century 17: 1 hit
Century 18: 1 hit
Century 19: 1 hit
Century 20: 1 hit
Total: 27 hits
LegoWhoNoteThatTheYearsWithThisPropertyAreWeightedHeavilyOnTheEarlyEndOfTheMillennium
Looks like I have two alternate answers to the Schpuzzle. But both fit.
DeleteGreat, geofan. Hope to see them your Schpuzzles answers on Wednesday. One, I gather, involves prime #s.
DeleteLegoPrimitive
I've gotten NOWHERE with prime numbers. I had tried some stuff with them back on the first night we had this P!, and also achieved nothing. Officially giving up now!
DeleteAnd the composite numbers? I think these are more numerous. The fact that there are eight of these in the first century-must be some kind of a clue?
ReplyDeleteIs it possible that next week we might see the return of the turducken? One can only hope.
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17...
DeleteLegoTheCountOfThreeFourFiveSixSevenEightCardMonteCristo
not lego of my ego?
Deletei think it is eggo? from the waffle add.
DeleteThat is my son's favorite sandwich-- The Monte Cristo. And now i am getting hungry again and will try to add to my Covid 19.
ReplyDeleteI suppose the Italian spelling of Lego would be Legino??
Plantsmith, I defer to you for all things Italian! (My mom was either Polish or Russian, and my dad was a "mongrel" of sorts.)
ReplyDeleteThe answer to the Schpuzzle is:
"2021 consists of ___ ___________ _______ _______."
The words in the blanks are:
1. a homophone of a preposition,
2. a 4-syllable adjective,
3. a 3-syllable adjective that functioned as a noun in a Malamud title,
4. a 2-syllable plural noun.
LegoWhoNotesThatThe"MostFun"OfTheTwentySevenPreviousQualifyingYearsOccursInTheThirteenthCentury
Got the odd numbers, not the even ones.
ReplyDeletepjbNotEvenGoingToSaySomethingOddHere
2. is it a SIN to COVET thy neighbor's pool CUE?
Delete(Rearrange the CAPS.)
4. A Cat Stevens album title.
LegoSingingHisHeartAway'CauseWhileTheSinnersSinTheChildrenPlay...Pool!(OopsWrongAlbumSoI'MSoSorryThisSignOffIsARedHerring)
That still leaves most of the Schpuzzle unanswered for me. Can I still have a hint for the AOC acronym?
DeletepjbHopingNotToHaveGivenAwayTheAnswerAmongTheAcronymsOne'sCompiled!
For the Slice:
DeleteThe AOC acronym is synonymous with a:
1. Plethora
2. two-word preposition
3. Wariness
As for the Schpuzzle:
1. duo
2. following one after the other in order
3. not "man-made"
4. Between "Buddah and the Chocolate Box" and "Izitso"
LegoEmptyingIntoWhite
That part of the Schpuzzle I've got. It's the actual math involved that I'm having trouble with.
DeleteRe the Slice: So it isn't Act Of Congress? And don't you mean "two-letter"?
pjbJustTryingToAvoidOccasionalConfusion
Lego, you mean a two-LETTER preposition for AOC, right?
DeleteOK, given the what we MUST, if we are to be honest, call the two sets of "spoon-feeding" hints for the Schpuzzle, I finally put it together..and never would have otherwise....however, now I must go try to understand what the solution MEANS!
DeleteOh, I had the wrong first word; now I get it...although it seems to me that I HAD TRIED that very thing, and it hadn't worked. Hmmmm....
DeleteYes, I am sorry. I meant to write "two-letter" preposition, not "two-word" preposition. Thanks for you indulgence.
DeleteLegoLetterLopper
Red light- yellow light- green light.
ReplyDelete4A RE(BUFF)ED
ReplyDelete8A M+ALICE
10A K(N)ICKERS
11A FOR+MAT
12A oPE(NUMB)RA
13A NORM+ANDY
16A ALTER+costumE+GO
19A rUNS+TABLE
1D S+NATURE > SAUNTER
2D DISCO+SURE > DISCOURSE
3D R(EVER)B
4D ARISTOTLE UNSURE > RUSSIAN ROULETTE
5D BACK+FIRE
6D F(L)AIR
7D MERE LAD > EMERALD
14D AL(MAMA)TER (?)
20D CLU(I)ES > SLUICE
22D LONER > ENROL
12, 23, 34, 45, 56, 67, 78, 89, 102, 203, 304, 405, 506, 607, 708, 809, 910, 1011, 1112, 1213, 1314, 1415, 1516, 1617, 1718, 1819, 1920, 2021, 2122
Abundance Of Caution
DRUID CAVERN > DAVID CURREN
SEX TITLES > SEXTITXES
NO COCOA > NOCOCON
BATHTUB > BUTHTUB
HANUKAH > HAKUKAH
ALABAMA > AMABAMA (lambda)
FOOLPROOF > FOOLPLOOF
WOODROW > WORDROW
NONAGON > NOGAGON
Missing pieces to the cryptic:
Delete21A AR(DEN)T
23A EDUCATED (I think the clue is ED + ED (editors, a type of journalist, hold U+CAT.
24A ALL RIGHT (pun)
25A CREW+(f)EL(t)
My earlier comment: "Another treat, at first I thought 25A was clever, then I thought it wasn't, and then I realized it was. Perhaps that sounds unkind?" I had the crossing letters C_E_E_, which could make CLEVER. But that didn't fit with the clue, so it wasn't CLEVER. After a bit CREWEL came to mind, which is a homophone of CRUEL, and you have to be Cruel to be (un)Kind. I resisted adding that Cranberry had hit a new (Nick) Low.
26A VIOLENCE (live once anagram)
15D PEN+TA(GO)N (not sure if that's the correct intent)
17D LORELEI (I get the singer part, not sure about the rock, except ORE)
18D SLEEPER (I think this is L(ittle) S(huteye) combined with repee (backwards), but not sure)
20D SLUICE (clues + I anagram)
22D ENROL (loner anagram)
SCHPUZZLE: 2021 contains: TWO CONSECUTIVE NATURAL NUMBERS.
ReplyDeleteOther yrs: 12, 23, 34, 45, 56, 67, 78, 89;
123, 234, 345, 456, 567, 678, 789, 910, 1011, 1112, 1213, 1234, 1314, 1415, 1516, 1617, 1718, 1819, 1920.
APPETIZER: From the hint: ABUNDANCE OF CARE. Alternates: ASSAULT ON COVID & Antibody-oligonucleotide conjugate [the very scientific answer I mentioned in a post]. But I still like my AVALANCHE OF CONFETTI!!
ENTREES:
1. DRUID & CAVERN => DAVID CURREN
2. SEX BIBLES => SEXBIBXES
3. NO COCOA => NO COCON
4. BATHTUB => BUTHTUB
5. HANUKAH => HAKUKAH
6. ALABAMA => AMABAMA
7. FOOLPROOF => FOOLPLOOF
8. WOODROW => WORDROW
9. NONAGON => NOGAGON
10. MARJORAM => MAROORAM
11. GNAWING => GNAWANG
DESSERT: TEGUCIGALPA, HONDURAS => OLDEN AUGUSTA GRAPHIC
pre-hints except as noted. © geofan 2020
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle: The year 2021 and the other 27 years that make up the answer each have exactly two prime factors. These two prime factors are either (a) identical [i.e., the year is a square of a prime number]; or (b) the two prime factors are adjacent prime numbers [which is true for 2021 = 43×47]. Details below.
---------------------------------
Call the nth prime number P(n) and the next larger prime number P(n+1). The smallest prime is P(1) = 2.
The combination of the below Series #1 [squares of primes] and Series #2 [products of adjacent primes] yields all 28 years in the Schpuzzle solution.
Series #1 [squares of primes] goes from P(1)×P(1) = 2×2 = 4 AD through P(14)×P(14) = 43×43 = 1849.
There are 14 years less than 2021: 4, 9, 25, 49, 121, 169, 289, 361, 529, 841, 961, 1369, 1681, 1849.
Series #2 consists of the products P(n)×P(n+1) from P(1)×P(2) = 2×3 = 6 AD to P(14)×P(15) = 43×47 = 2021. The preceding year in Series #2, 1763, has prime factors P(13) = 41 and P(14) = 43. There are 14 years up to 2021: 6, 15, 35, 77, 143, 221, 323, 437, 667, 899, 1147, 1517, 1763, 2021.
Combine Series #1 and #2 to yield the solution: 4, 6, 9, 15, 25, 35, 49, 77, 121, 143, 169, 221, 289, 323, 361, 437, 529, 667, 841, 899, 961, 1147, 1369, 1517, 1681, 1763, 1849, 2021. The next years are 2209, 2491, 2809. In numerical order, the years alternate between Series #1 and Series #2.
The stipulation of “adjacent prime numbers” excludes years that have exactly two non-adjacent prime factors, e.g., 2019 = P(2)×P(122) = 3×673.
-----------------------------------
Alternate answer: As noted above, the prime factors of 2021 are 43 and 47. The set of all years up to 2021 with exactly two prime factors, at least one of which is 43 or 47, yields a different set of 28 years:
Series P(n)×43 = 86, 129, 215, 301, 473, 559, 731, 817, 989, 1247, 1333, 1591, 1763, 1849
Series P(n)×47 = 94, 141, 235, 329, 517, 611, 799, 893, 1081, 1363, 1457, 1739, 1927, 2021
Combine these two series for the alternate answer: 86, 94, 129, 141, 215, 235, 301, 329, 473, 517, 559, 611, 731, 799, 817, 893, 989, 1081, 1247, 1333, 1363, 1457, 1591, 1739, 1763, 1849, 1927, 2021
Next years in this alternate answer are: 2209 = 47×47, 2279 = 43×53, and 2491 = 47×53.
-----------------------------------
Post-Tue-hint: “two consecutive natural numbers”
12, 23, 34, 45, 56, 67, 78, 89, [102, 203, 304, 405, 506, 607, 708, 809,] 910, 1011, 1112, 1213, 1314, 1415, 1516, 1617, 1718, 1819, 1920, 2021. The eight years between the [ ] only confirm if the 0 is “pronounced as O.” If 0's are neglected, then 1002, 2003 would also seem to conform.
Slice: ACT OF CONGRESS, also ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION (+ thousands of alternates; see Blogger!)
post-Tue-hint: ABUNDANCE OF CAUTION (not in the Blogger lists)
Entrées
#1: DRUID CAVERN => DAVID CURREN
#2: SEX BIBLES, change x to X => SEXBIBXES
#3: NO COCOA, change A to N => NOCOCON
#4: BATHTUB, change A to U => BUTHTUB
#5: HANUKAH, change N to K => HAKUKAH
#6: ALABAMA, change L to M => AMABAMA. Hint: Change one A to D => A LAMBDA. After Lego's rewording to “just one D,” just LAMBDA
#7: FOOLPROOF, change R to L => FOOLPLOOF
#8: WOODROW, change O to R => WORDROW
#9: NONAGON, change N to G ]=> NOGAGON
#10: MARJORAM, change J to O => MAROORAM
#11: GNAWING, change I to A => GNAWANG
Dessert: OLDEN AUGUSTA GRAPHIC => TEGUCIGALPA, HONDURAS [post-Sun-hint]
Schpuzzle Two consecutive natural numbers--- 2021 ,----- 2021=43x 47,
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZER: Abundance of Caution- (red light- yellow light- green light)
ENTREES:
1. Druid plus cavern -David Curren
2. SEX titles -- Sextitxes
3. NO cocoa - NO cocon
4. Bathtub - Buthtub
5. Hanukah - Hakukah
6. Alabama -- Amabama
7. Foolproof - Foolploof
8. Woodrow -- Wordrow
9. Nonagon - Nogagon
10. Marjoram - Marooram
11. Gnawing - Gnawang
DESSERT: Tegucigalpa, Honduras - Olden Augusta Graphic
I just uploaded cranberry's completed Cryptic Crossword grid, above the Comments Section.
ReplyDeleteLegoSaysYouAllDidGreatSolvingThisWeek(AndThatNASAOughtToHire"MasterMathematician"geofanToHelpThemCalculateHowToLandASpaceCraftOnPluto!)
Schpuzzle
ReplyDelete2021 are TWO CONSECUTIVE NATURAL NUMBERS.(43×47)
Appetizer Menu
See Legolambda's official explanation for all the cryptic crossword answers.
Menu
Pandemocrazy Slice
ABUNDANCE OF CAUTION
Entrees
1. DAVID CURREN, DRUID, CAVERN
2. SEX BIBLES(SEXBIBXES)
3. NO COCOA(NOCOCON)
4. BATHTUB(BUTHTUB)
5. HANUKAH(HAKUKAH)
6. ALABAMA(AMABAMA, LAMBDA)
7. FOOLPROOF(FOOLPLOOF)
8. WOODROW(WORDROW)
9. NONAGON(NOGAGON)
10. MARJORAM(MAROORAM)
11. GNAWING(GNAWANG)
Dessert
TEGUCIGULPA, HONDURAS(OLDEN AUGUSTA GRAPHIC)
Why doesn't that f---in' a--h--- concede?! This was all his fault!-pjb
This week's official answers for the record, part 1:
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
An uncommon Common Era occurrence
What numerical property does the year 2021 share with only 27 of the other 2,020 years, beginning with the year 1?
(According to the math, only about 1.4 percent of the Common Era years share this uncommon property.)
Can you name the other 27 years that share this property?
What will be the next future year that shares this property?
Answer:
2021 consists of two or more consecutive natural numbers, in this case, two: 20 and 21.
The 27 other years with this property: 12, 23, 34, 45, 56, 67, 78, 89, 123, 234, 345, 456, 567, 678, 789, 910, 1011, 1112, 1213, 1234, 1314, 1415, 1516, 1617, 1718, 1819 and 1920.
The next year that shares this property will be 2122.
Appetizer Menu
Auld Lang Syne Language Appetizer:
HappyCrypticNewCrosswordYear
(See the graphic of the completed grid that appears just above this week's Comments Section.)
ANSWERS:
ACROSS
4. Turned down fan in rush(8)
REBUFFED
BUFF inside REED
8. Married woman's bitterness(6)
MALICE
M+ALICE
9. Philosophical sort needs help carrying box(8)
SOCRATES
SOS containing CRATE
10. Football players with name in underwear?(8)
KNICKERS
N inside KICKERS
11. Not against dull arrangement?(6)
FORMAT
FOR+MAT
12. Carmen, for example---having lost love, dead inside, looking for shelter(8)
PENUMBRA
NUMB inside OPERA-O
13. It's a part of France, guys(8)
NORMANDY
NORM+ANDY
16. Clark Kent, for example, has to change costume, ultimately, then leave(5,3)
ALTER EGO
ALTER+E+GO
19. Rocky runs right off before meal(8)
UNSTABLE
RUNS-R+TABLE
21. Eager to put paintings around room?(6)
ARDENT
ART containing DEN
23. Informed journalists getting close to you, Tom?(8)
EDUCATED
EDs(editors)containing U+CAT
24. None left? Good!(3,5)
ALL RIGHT
If ALL are RIGHT, that would mean none are left(left and right are opposites, of course).
25. "Tapestry" band felt naked?(6)
CREWEL
CREW+FELT-FT
26. Fighting broadcast live once?(8)
VIOLENCE
LIVEONCE anagram
DOWN
1. S-spooky nature walk?(7)
SAUNTER
S+NATURE anagram
2. Talk, dance music, and rock? Sure!(9)
DISCOURSE
DISCO+SURE anagram
3. Effect always used in R and B?(6)
REVERB
EVER inside RB
4. Aristotle unsure about the whole shooting match?(7,8)
RUSSIAN ROULETTE
ARISTOTLEUNSURE anagram
5. Fail to let go, hanging onto past(8)
BACKFIRE
BACK+FIRE
6. Just bringing in large gift(5)
FLAIR
FAIR containing L
7. Mere lad, awfully green(7)
EMERALD
MERELAD anagram
14. Mother in control, hard to leave school(4,5)
ALMA MATER
MAMA inside HALTER-H
15. Writer shot inside brown government building(8)
PENTAGON
PEN+(GO inside TAN)
17. Rock singer(7)
LORELEI
double definition
18. One in bed getting a little shuteye has to go to the bathroom regularly(7)
SLEEPER
S+LEER containing PeE
20. One captivated by clues going with flow?(6)
SLUICE
I inside CLUES anagram
22. Join troubled loner(5)
ENROL
LONER anagram
Lego...
Man- i really need another primer on these.
DeleteThis week's official answers for the record, part 2:
ReplyDeleteMENU
Pandemocrazy Slice:
Dropping the ball as multitudes fall
The letters AOC stand for Age Of Consent or for New York politician Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
What phrase heard lately in the news does AOC also stand for?
Hint: The phrase is usually preceded by the article “an.”
Answer:
"An Abundance Of Caution" (which is heard in conjunction with efforts to stem the spread and contraction of Covid-19)
HINT TO GIVE: The phrase is associated with the Corona Virus (Covid-19) pandemic.
Riffing Off Shortz And Curren Slices:
Minding one’s peas and cues
ENTREE #1
Take a five-letter word for an ancient Celtic priest or sayer of sooth, and a six-letter word for where he may hang out.
Rearrange these eleven letters to name a puzzle-maker, first and last names.
Who is this puzzle-maker?
What is the priest and his hangout?
Answer:
David Curren; Druid, cavern
ENTREE #2
Think of a two-word phrase, in three and six letters, that one might use to describe “The Pleasure Bond” by Masters & Johnson, “Sexual Behavior in the Human Male” by Alfred Kinsey and “Dr. Ruth’s Guide for Married Lovers” by Dr. Ruth Westheimer.
Replace the antepenultimate (third-last) letter in the phrase with the a letter you might see next to it on clothing labels. The resulting nine letters will read backward and forward the same. What phrase is it?
Answer:
Sex bibles (Sex bibles=>Sex bibxes)
ENTREE #3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=puJePACBoIo
Think of a two-word response, in two and five letters, that Pete Dionisopoulos, proprietor of the Saturday Night Live Olympia Restaurant, might blurt out to a customer who orders hot chocolate. Replace the last letter with the letter thirteen places ahead in the alphabet (Rot13 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROT13). The result will read the same backward and forward. What phrase is it?
Answer:
"No cocoa!"; (No cocoa=>No cocon)
ENTREE #4
Think of a compound word that is a familiar household fixture, in seven letters. Replace the second letter with a letter that is a homophone of a pronoun. The result will read the same backward and forward. What word is it?
Answer:
Bathtub; (Bathtub=>Buthtub)
ENTREE #5
http://joemaller.com/601/sixteen-ways-to-spell-hanukkah/
Take the third-most-common of sixteen different ways to spell a particular holiday, in seven letters. Replace the third letter with the letter three places earlier in the alphabet. The result will read the same backward and forward. What holiday is it?
Answer:
Hanukah (Hanukah=>Hakukah)
ENTREE #6
Think of a familiar proper place name, in seven letters. Replace the second letter with the next letter of the alphabet. The result will read the same backward and forward. What place name is it?
Hint: The name contains four letters that are the same. Replace two of them with a “d” and rearrange to result to spell a Greek letter.
Answer:
Alabama; (Alabama=>Amabama)
Hint: ALABAMA - AA + D => LAMBDA
ENTREE #7
Think of an non-hyphenated compound adjective, in nine letters, that means “unfailing or reliable, as a method or plan, for example.” Its fourth and sixth letters are abbreviations for two very common opposite words. Replace the sixth letter with a duplicate of the fourth letter. The result will read the same backward and forward.
What adjective is this?
Answer:
Foolproof; (Foolproof=>Foolploof; l=left, r=right)
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
ReplyDelete(Riffing Off Shortz And Curren Slices, continued):
ENTREE #8
Think of the first name of a U.S. president that was also the first name on the birth certificates of a “Dustbowl singer/songwriter,” a big band clarinetist and a country singer nicknamed “Red.”
Replace the third letter with the letter three places later in the alphabet. The result will read the same backward and forward.
What first name is it?
Answer:
Woodrow; Woodrow=>Wordrow
ENTREE #9
Think of a geometrical shape in seven letters. Replace the third letter with the letter seven places earler in the alphabet. The result will read the same backward and forward. What shape is this?
Answer:
Nonagon; (Nonagon=>Nogagon)
ENTREE #10
Think of a word you might see while perusing your spice rack, in eight letters. Replace the fourth letter with the letter five places later in the alphabet. The result will read the same backward and forward. What word is it?
Answer:
Marjoram; (Marjoram=>Marooram)
ENTREE #11
Think of something for which rodents are infamous, in 7 letters. Replace the fifth letter (a vowel) with a different vowel. The result will read the same backward and forward.
For what are pesky rodents famous?
Hint: Etymologists have an advantage in solving this puzzle.
Answer:
Gnawing; Gnawang
Dessert Menu
Amen Corner Dessert:
Caption, capital and capitalization
Name a world capital and its country.
Rearrange the combined letters of the capital and country to spell a three-word caption for the vintage image pictured here.
The three words are:
1. an adjective describing something associated with a bygone era,
2. a capitalized proper noun, and
3. a noun that is more commonly used as an adjective.
What are the capital and country?
What is the caption?
Answer:
"Olden Augusta graphic" (Tegucigalpa, Honduras)
Lego!