Friday, December 23, 2022

“The Twelve Daze of Christmas” “...and a pair of colors in a pear tree” “Clearly, thou art joking!” “Ribbity-Rabbity-Roo!” Good cheer you hear this time of year

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Good cheer you hear this time of year

Take a four-letter part of an evergreen tree that is often used as a Christmas decoration and the ending two words, each four letters, of a seemingly never-ending Christmas song. Replace an E and an R with an A and an H. Rearrange these 12 letters to name a three-word phrase you see and hear this time of year.

What phrase is this?

Appetizer Menu

Yule Be Baffled Appetizer:

“The Twelve Daze of Christmas”

1. He’ll be home for Christmas!

Name a small, but well-known city. 

Shift the letters six places later in the alphabet, and the result will be part of an animal you might find in that location, but not many other places in the US. 

This city might be one of the last stops on a couple of annual epic journeys. 

What is the city, and what is the animal part?

Hint: The animal part has been oft used in art.  

2. Heading to that Holiday Party:  

Name something you might find as a part of traditional Christmas-time transportation in eight letters. Move the fifth letter seven places later in the alphabet to name something you might find in modern transportation.
What are the two parts of transportation?  

Hint: The devices have a related intent, but the effect is the opposite. 

3. Party People:  

Name two well-known people. The last name of one is a homophone for a word that might describe a party, the last name of the other is a homophone of what you might hear from that party. 

The two first names are related things that might be a reason for having a party. Who are the two people?

4. Holiday Fixings: 

Name a food you might see in a holiday dinner in the form of blank of blank. Spoonerize the first and last words, and the result will be a complaint people have about their computers. What are the two phrases?   

5. Holiday Shopping:  

Name something in four letters you might receive in the holiday season. Shift those letters 12 places later in the alphabet and the
result will be what the giver might have done to get that. What did you receive, and what did the giver have to do?
Hint: This answer would have made no sense just 25 or so years ago, but is now ubiquitous.  

6. ‘Tis the Season to be Stressed:  

Write two US Capital cities (in adjoining states) in order. Remove several interior consecutive letters. The remaining letters name a person who might help with holiday stress.

What are the cities, and who is the person?  

7. Presents Past and Future:  

Name a popular type of toy in five letters. Shift the letters 19 places later (or 7 places earlier) in the alphabet, and the result will be a part of many toys and games. Both have been popular for thousands of years, and will likely remain so far into the future. What are this popular type of toy and the part of many toys and games?    
Hint: The popular type of toy is more often given to girls. 

8. A Holiday Mishap in TV Guide:

“Holiday centerpiece gets burned by spritely decoration. Holy Lucifer!” 

That is a fictitious TV Guide synopsis of an actual fantasy drama television series that had a nine-year run. 

The synopsis is based, alas, on a
typographical error in the name of the show that some TV Guide proofreader missed! 

The typo involved one mistyped letter, like “Cheeks” instead of “Cheers.”

What was the name of the original television show, and what was the TV Guide goof?

9. Holidays Around the World:  

Name a well-known American brand that you might use during the holiday season, six letters. 
Add a letter to the end to get a holiday with origins in other places of the world.
What is the brand name, and what is the holiday?

10. Musical-Metro-Gnome

Name a major city in two words. Remove one letter, and the result will be the last name of a well-known musician. 

Drop the letters indicating the continent of that city, and the result will be a famous holiday figure.

What are the city, musician, and holiday figure?

11. A Pair of Plants

Name a species of plant that might be used during Christmas. Remove the last letter and you get a different species of the same type of plant. Note that these two plants grow in very different environments.

What are the two plants?

12. “I’ll be home (ASDFJKL;) for Christmas”

For those not familiar, “typewriter words” consist of eight letters that use each finger on a standard typewriter once and only once... like the “plaudits” we hope you will bestow upon these Dozen Holidaze Appetizers! (P-L-A-U-D-I-T-S = right-pinky, right-ring, left-pinky, right-index, left-middle, right-middle, left-index, left-ring).   

Name a plant associated with the holiday season. Remove two consecutive letters, each that appears once earlier in the word. The result is a common misspelling of this plant that is a “typewriter word.”

What is the plant, and what is the “typewriter word?”

MENU

Holiday Slice:

“...and a pair of colors in a pear tree”

The number 188,928 suggests a holiday beverage. 

The numbers 80,119 and 32,481 suggest a pair of colors associated with that holiday. Explain why these three numbers suggest this beverage and two colors. 

Hint #1: One of the holiday colors is a French word.

Hint #2: French Hens

Riffing Off Shortz And Naharajan Slices:

“Ribbity-Rabbity-Roo!”

Will Shortz’s December 18th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Chip Naharajan of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, reads:

If you change the third letter of WOLF to an O, you get the sound made by a dog — WOOF. Name a six-letter animal and change the second letter to get the sound made by a completely different animal. What is it?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Naharajan Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Name two nations that border the Pacific Ocean and a U.S. city that has been dubbed the “Heart of the Heartland.” 

Take the letters in either the first half or second half of the name of the city and the letters in the two nations. Rearrange these combined letters to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.

Who is it?

What are the two nations and the “Heart of the Heartland” city?

Note: Entree #2 is a riff-off composed by Jeff Zarkin (SuperZee) whose “Puzzle Riffs” are featured regularly on Puzzleria! 

Entrees #3-through-5 were created by Greg VanMechelen, whose “Econfusions” feature appears in this week’s Puzzleria!

ENTREE #2

If you change the third letter of WOLF to an O, you get the sound made by a dog — WOOF. Change no letters in a  “fishy animal to get what you see many Blaine’s Blog commenters do each week in regard to the Weekend Edition Sunday National Public Radio puzzle? 

What is it?

ENTREE #3

Name a “feathery animal in six letters. Change no letters in this animal to get what many in Blainesville do each week in regard to the Weekend Edition Sunday NPR puzzle?

ENTREE #4

Take the name of any member of a certain successful rock group. Change the forth letter in that name to get the breed of a canine creature. 

Now take the first name of one particular
member of the rock group. Change the first letter in that name to get a wild canine creature.

What are this rock group member, and the breed of the first canine creature?

What is the first name and the wild canine creature?

ENTREE #5

Name an animal in six letters. Add one letter to make a sound that a different fabled (but not fabulous) animal might make.

What are this six-letter animal and sound from a fabled animal?

ENTREE #6

If you change the third letter of WOLF to an O, you get the sound made by a dog — WOOF. 

Name a different four-letter animal and change the first letter to get the sound made by a completely different animal. 

What animal is it?

ENTREE #7

Add two letters to the beginning of an avian creature to get a sound made by a canine or ursine creature.

Add two letters to the end of this sound to get a container (such as a pitcher, pail or can) for beverage bought in gallon or half-gallon quantities. Change the third letter in an ursine creature to get the name of this beverage. 

What is the avian creature and the sound made by a canine or ursine creature?

What are the container, the ursine creature and the beverage?

ENTREE #8

Name a word for a five-letter newborn critter. Replace a two-letter greeting within it with either half of a four-letter slang term for “one that is remarkable or wonderful.” The result is the sound made by a this critter when it grows up. 

What are this critter and the sound it will make?

What are the two-letter greeting and the slang term for “one that is remarkable or wonderful?”

ENTREE #9

Name a word for a standardbred horse trained for harness racing. (This is also a word for a pig's foot that some people eat.) 

Remove  from the beginning of the word two initials of a Mt. Rushmore president. The result is  a mammal of the weasel family with webbed and clawed feet and dark brown fur.

What are this horse and weaselly mammal? 

ENTREE #10

Name a creature that hops. Move its initial letter to the end. 

The second half of the result spells a creature that flies that is not a fly. What are these hopping and flying creatures?

ENTREE #11

Name a  silvery gray arboreal marsupial creature. 

Reverse the order of its final two letters. Move those reversed letters to the beginning. 

The result sounds like a corporation which is a
major global producer of a silvery gray metal.

What are this silvery gray marsupial and this corporation that produces this silvery gray metal?

Dessert Menu

Tinselly Translation Dessert:

“Clearly, thou art joking!”

Translate the exclamation, “Clearly, thou art joking!” into English that is less stilted and more modern and conversational.

Your translation must contain three words and
thirteen letters. Anagram those thirteen letters to form three new words:

🎄 two that are synonymous with “Christmas narrative,”

🎄 and one that is the literary spelling of a name associated with that narrative.

What is your translation?

What are the synonym of “Christmas narrative” and the literary spelling of the name associated with that narrative?   

Hint: The literary spelling of the name associated with that narrative is also how the name is spelled in the Shone, Sesotho, Yoruba and modern Venetian languages.

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.

58 comments:

  1. I can't believe it is already the day before Christmas Eve. Time if truly flying at a frightening rate.

    That aside, there are SO many puzzles this week, it's impossible to even read them all in one sitting. I have what I'm sure is NOT a correct answer for the Schpuzzle; am stuck on Ecoapps 2, 3, 6, and thought #8 was cute. The Slice...well, I have an answer, but don't really know WHY, i.e. there was no final reason that I could come up with.

    Then all the entrees....I still can't find the city for #1, though of course, working backwards yields its letters...just nothing seems to exist. There seem to be several answers or #2, one of which I moved to #3 when I reached it. I'm stuck on 4, 5 and 6, and had planned to quit there. BUT somehow when going to read the Dessert, my eye caught Entree #11, and it was easy, so I worked my way rather rapidly back up through #7 (thank goodness.)

    And now I'm too exhausted to even read Dessert. Merrily we roll along....

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    1. P.S. Read and solved Dessert after all. Woe is me.

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    2. E-#4 -If you remove first letter you get another creature.

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  2. I haven't even read this week's puzzles yet, but here is a bonus one. Totally feel free NOT to do this if it doesn't strike your fancy. That being said, it's really easy.

    Think of a festive two-word greeting. Take the first letter of the first word, the middle third of the second word, and the last letter of the first word. You'll have the name of one of my pets.

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    1. Tortie,
      TWO GUESSES:
      Gid (GlaD tidIngs)?
      Fiz (FeliZ navIdad)?

      LegoWhoUsedToOwnAWonderfulBlackCatNamed"Bug"(BringingFun!)

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    2. I'm guessing your pet will play for you.

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    3. Yes, it's Misty. Not as creative as Gid or Fiz. :)

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    4. Congrats on a very nice pet-name puzzle, Tortitude, and congrats to those who solved it. Somehow, I misread Tortie's instuction "middle third" as "middle letter," which limited my solution-possibility pool! "Misty" is a very creative, fine and felicitous name for a feline, Tortitude.

      LegoWhoSuggestsThat"Misty"MightAlsoBeAnAptNameForAPetBunnyFrogOrMountainGoat!

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  3. Ursa major is a circumpolar constellation. As is Cassiopeia.

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  4. I'm going through the puzzles in kind of a random order, and will give a more thorough report tomorrow. For now I must say I came up with a NSFW alternative for Entree #2.

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    1. Tortitude, If you add a "u" to your NSFW alternative answer to Entree #2 and anagram the result, can you form a two-word description of a single, double, triple or Homer by Ernie Banks or Ron Santo?

      LegoWrigley

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    2. That's correct, Plantsmith...
      North Siders, Field? Wrigley!

      LegoSays"NoSouthSidePaleHoseNeedApply!"

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  5. Merry Christmas Eve eve to all!
    First of all, I plan on submitting another cryptic crossword here some time after the 1st of the year, but I have to say due to the recent malfunction of my old Kindle Fire, and having to transition to what apparently was Renae's tablet, and then my new Kindle came earlier in the mail than we expected, I was unable to save the rough drafts of a few more puzzle ideas of mine(and it was quite a few, BTW!). At best, I can remember a few bits and pieces of maybe two of them, but I only had the full puzzles under "Drafts" on my Gmail, and they disappeared. I did not actually write anything down by hand. Once we get past Christmas(and perhaps New Year's), I will try to put together some of my most recent ideas as drafts on this new device, and eventually send one off for use on the site this January(you have my word).
    Mom and I are fine. She didn't feel like cooking any of our box meals, and nobody invited us out to eat because A. We have plans for Christmas Eve as well as Christmas Day, and B. It is too damn cold here in Jasper(really all of AL)right now! I'm surprised Mom could stand being out at Hardee's drive-through for any amount of time this evening! We also watched "Andy Griffith" and "Pyramid" as usual, nothing else really on, and then I took a shower. Just got out, dried off, and here I am. Have yet to even check Wordle or the Guardian Prize Crossword, but I do know the Private Eye Crossword has been a Jumbo these past two weeks, and somehow you're also supposed to figure out some quote by Keir Starmer(come to think of it, I've probably already mentioned this last week), but I really don't have time to try to complete that one, especially after seeing just how many puzzles there are here! Spent most of last night just checking out the features on this new Kindle, so I really only looked through these puzzles just the once. Here's my "face-value" progress so far:
    Appetizers #8-#10 solved.
    The Holiday Slice solved.
    Entree #2: The very first word I could think of was most likely Tortie's NSFW alternative, and I totally get where Lego's going with his reply.
    Entrees #4, #8, and #9 solved, haven't heard of the container in #7, so that one's unfinished(everything else but).
    Will get back to these after Xmas, or that night at the earliest. Hints are always welcome, of course.
    Good luck in solving to all, and may we all have a safe and Merry Christmas this coming Sunday! Cranberry out!
    pjbNowKnowsHeStillHasClothesAndSomeSortOfNoveltyCalendarToLookForwardToAsFarAsPresentsGoThisWeekend(AlreadySawHisWhitman'sSamplerByAccidentDuringWednesday'sGroceryRun!)

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    1. I empathize with your Kindle snafu, cranberry. I went though a somewhat similar "Loss of data issue" back during Thanksgiving of 2016, when my external hard drive (where I stored all my Puzzleria! texts, ideas, poems, images and other vital files) JUST WOULD NOT OPEN!!! Mathew Huffman (whose "Conundrum Set" feature has often graced our pages, and who is a master of many things, including all things cyber) generously spent hours and hours and hours on the phone with me in an effort to help me recover my invaluable data. Mathew also posted a passel of his splendid puzzles that week on Puzzleria's Comments section, so the faithful followers would have some truly excellent and challenging puzzles to solve. So, I've been there, Patrick, and I am sorry. Take as much time as you need to prepare and present another of your excellent Cryptic Crossword Masterpieces. As you know, our "guest-puzzle-maker" schedule is much more fluid than eggnog!

      LegoWhoIsNoEgghead(AlthoughHeDoesOccasionallyLayARottenEgg!)

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    2. The question is: did you ever actually RECOVer all your valuable data? I have a feeling not, since you didn't say so.

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    3. Thanks for asking, VT. Alas, despite Mathew Huffman's Herculean efforts to help me recover the contents of the external drive, they had already vanished into the"black hole of the cyber-ether!"
      Since then I've been backing up all my files. Lesson learned.

      LegoLuddite

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    4. I'm so very sorry to hear that, Lego. I wonder what on earth happened to all your files.

      Delete
  6. Just found the container in #7!
    pjbHasNeverNeededIt,SinceHeNeverDrinksTheBeverageInQuestionEither

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  7. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TEwNS869Yyg

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    1. I may be singing this tomorrow at Atl-Ha.

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    2. I got my movies mixed up. I was thinking of the "don't call me Shirley" line from Airplane! "Airport" was a different movie.

      SURELY YOU JEST > YULE STORY, JESU

      But "Christmas At The Airport" is a great song, regardless.

      Delete
  8. A ubiquitous phrase you want, " room for milk?"

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  9. Midday Monday Hints:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    There was a good Will Shortz puzzle on NPR that the Puzzlemaster himself created and presented to us as a Christmas present!

    Yule Be Baffled Appetizer:
    (Note: I shall give Ecoarchitect "first crack" at gifting hints to his "dozen dazzlers," if he so desires or chooses. If he wants me to give some hints, I shall do so.)

    Holiday Slice:
    The holiday is Christmas.
    The holiday beverage has six letters, just like 188,928 has six digits.
    The five-digit numbers 80,119 and 32,481 suggest a pair of colors (containing five and five letters) associated with that holiday.

    Riffing Off Shortz And Naharajan Slices:
    ENTREE #1
    The two nations that border the Pacific Ocean are oriental, and the U.S. city is in Oklahoma.
    ENTREE #2
    "Seize the day!"
    ENTREE #3
    Remove one letter from this animal to get a synonym of "awaken."
    ENTREE #4
    One might snoop around in Australia to find the canine creatures, or at least one of them.
    ENTREE #5
    "Pigs 'n' 'lupinity' "
    ENTREE #6
    The third letters of the animal and the sound are the same letter. The two letters flanking that letter in the alphabet are the first letters of the animal and the sound.
    ENTREE #7
    "The padre wore an alb."
    Rearrange the combined letters of two words in that sentence to spell the names of the the ursine and avian creatures.
    ENTREE #8
    The two-letter greeting is also a U.S. postal abbreviation.
    Either half of a four-letter slang term for “one that is remarkable or wonderful,” if reversed, often bestows its "safety stamp of approval."
    ENTREE #9
    The weaselly mammal was a name given to a frat boy in "Animal House."
    ENTREE #10
    The creature that hops is no bunny. Nor is it a pooch... but it does have a _____.
    ENTREE #11
    A few slogans for the silvery gray metal in question:
    ________, since 1825.
    ________, light and strong.
    ________, metal with mettle.
    ________, stretched like a drum, Saves our food, Every crumb.
    ________, strong and light. And it doesn’t rust!
    ________, the most recyclable metal!

    Tinselly Translation Dessert:
    The translated version of “Clearly, thou art joking!” (into English that is less stilted and more conversational) begins with the letters S, Y and J, and contains words of 6, 3 and 4 letters.

    LegoWho"HeardTheBellsOnChristmasDay"...UntilHeReachedOverAndShutOffHisAlarmClock

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  10. Hello, all.
    Pre-hints, had answers for all except Schpuzzle; Appetizers #2,4; and Entrée #5.

    It seems that all answers to Entrée #3 could also be answers to #2 as well.

    Have four alternates to Appetizer #6. But two use one state capital only. The two that use two capitals each have a Scroogelike element.

    Appetizer #9 is IMHO misleading. The intended answer is a *period of time*, not a holiday. The answer is analogous to saying Advent and Lent in the Christian tradition are "holidays."

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    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    2. The answer to Appetizer #8 iswonderful. It has that genius of a perfect pun.

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    3. If memory serves me correctly, this week's Slice is reminiscent of a Schpuzzle from some time back.

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    4. Very astute comments and observations, geofan.
      * It is true that Entrees #2 and #3 are interchangeable. After I post this comment I shall do some tinkering to remedy that.
      * You also make a fair point about Appetizer #9. Your analogies to Advent and Lent are good ones. Perhaps we might call it a "holimonth?"
      * I agree with you that Eco's Appetizer #8 is wonderful.
      * You are also correct about the Slice seeming familiar. I used the same "trick" in a past puzzle... but perhaps not far enough back in the past.
      * Congrats on your Schuzzle solve. I though my hint was somewhat obscure. I'd be curious to know if that hint helped you, of if you did not need it.

      LegoWhoAppreciatesgeofan'sAlwaysAstuteCommentsAndWonderfulWorldplayPuzzles

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    5. Lego, the Schpuzzle hint was useful.

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    6. It's odd, I had thought that Entree #9 seemed very familiar (and had written down "haven't we had something similar to this before?"

      Re the oft-mentioned now Entree #8, I had written initially that I thought it was cute. I guess it is more than cute!

      I'm going to try to go figure out about the Schpuzzle hint, even though I have what I'm convinced is an alternate answer. And I still have Apps 2, 3, 6 and Entrees 4, 5 and 6 to try to solve.

      Delete
  11. Got the Schpuzzle(clever), Appetizers #4 and #5(definite), and #3, #11, and #12(maybe), Entree #10(definite), and the Dessert(definite).
    pjbAlsoLikesThePunInAppetizer#8(FirstThingHeSolved)

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  12. Yet another fan of App #8 here! It took me some time to figure out as I thought it was going to be a Game of Thrones-type show.

    I didn't post earlier because I was still making progress, but when that progress stopped, it was already Christmas, and I didn't feel like posting. In any case, I still need to figure out App #2, 3, and 6. I think #3 will be a good puzzle, but I just don't know it yet.

    For App #6, is the word for someone who helps the letters that are taken out, or the ones that remain?

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    Replies
    1. Good question, Torty.For my alternates, I used the letters taken out.

      I am still stumped on App #2 and Entrée #5.

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    2. The image of an angel with a flame thrower is too good to resist.

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    3. For Entree #5, think of a story with Lego's "Pigs 'n' 'lupinity." The six-letter animal is a bird.

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    4. Got it, but IMHO it is not a sound, e.g. sighing is not a sound, but moaning is.

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  13. A few Tuesday Hints:
    App #2:
    Sleigh-ride; left-turn, right turn
    App #3
    (Hint from Ecoarchitect): Neither of these people is from the US, and one is associated with a different kind of party.
    App #6:
    In Eco's intended answer, the name of the person who might help with holiday stress is formed from the letters that remain, not the letters taken out. This person is a woman, similar to Abby and Ann, who, as I aspire to do, offered helpful hints.
    Entree #4
    The "certain successful rock group" is probably the most well-known rock group in history.
    Entree #5
    Big 'n' Bad with Hair on his chinny-chin-chin
    Entree #6
    The last three letters of both words spell something you see (or don't see) on paper that might be black, blue, red... or invisible.

    LegoLandersVanBuren

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    Replies
    1. Using the removed letters, I got the following alternates (a,b tongue-in-cheek; c,d not):
      original, from letters taken out:
      a: NY, RI → ALBANY, PROVIDENCE → ANY PRO [Note: A maritime boundary exists between Fishers Island and Montauk Point (both NY) and Watch Hill RI.]
      b: AZ, NM → PHOENIX, SANTA FÉ → NIX SANTA
      c: RI (only), no change → PROVIDENCE (i.e., God)
      d: CA (only) → SACRAMENT (of the Church)

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    2. I like your alternates, Geo. And what about a thing (not person) who might help with holiday stress (also using the removed letters)? CA, OR -> SACRAMENTO, SALEM -> MENTOS

      In any case, I now have App #2 and #6. Still working on App #3. I came up with a name before the hint, but he's American. I now thought of someone from another country. Can't really do much, though, with either name.

      Delete
  14. I'm typing in my answers right now, and I'm just seeing "Fishy" as part of Entree #3. Was it recently added, or did I just miss it the first time? My original answer was a bird.

    TortieWhoNeedsToDoADoOver

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    Replies
    1. That should be Entree #2, sorry.

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    2. Tortitude,
      I added "fishy" to Entree #2 and "feathery" to Entree #3 because, as geofan correctly noted in his December 26, 2022 at 4:26 PM Comment, otherwise the two puzzles are the same puzzle!

      LegoWhoNotesThatTheAnswerToEntree#2HasFourLettersAndFinsRatherThanFeathers

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  16. Puzzeleria 12-28-22 NYC 37 Degrees.

    Shpuzzle.
    Eco11. Norfolk Island pine/ Pin Oak

    Eco 12-Pointsettia- -i- poinsettia, Minus the i

    Entree
    #1 Chip Nahrajan indianapolis,
    #2 Bitch -female dogs
    3. grouse
    4.Entree#4 Beatle-Beagle/ Ringo-Dingo
    Entree5
    Enree 6 Lark–bark

    Entree #7. GR- Owl- Growler
    Entree #8 - Chick Ch(lu) cluck.
    Entree #9. Standard bred horse - Trotter- -tr= Otter
    Entree #10- Kangaroo- Angarook- Rook (some kind of a black bird)
    Entree 11- Koala- Alcoa- smelter of Aluminum. One plant is in Vancouver,Wash.

    Dessert

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    1. Hail the lovely-as-leis Linda Berry!
      (She's a woman quite extraordinary).
      Patrick's posted her record
      Of devotion uncheckered...
      Thus she merits a birthday that's MERRY!

      LegoWhoSincerelyWishesPatrick'sMotherAJoyousBirthday

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  18. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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    Replies
    1. I like your original Schpuzzle alternative answer, VT.

      LegoLambdAchoo!

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    2. This week's official answers for the record, Part 1:

      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      Good cheer you hear this time of year
      Take a four-letter part of an evergreen tree that is often used as a Christmas decoration and the ending two words, each four letters, of a seemingly never-ending Christmas song. Replace an E and an R with an A and an H. Rearrange these 12 letters to name a three-word phrase you see and hear this time of year.
      What phrase is this?
      Answer:
      Peace on Earth
      (pine) CONE + PEAR TREE ("The Twelve Days of Christmas") - E - R + A + H=> CONA+PEAH+TREE=> PEACE ON EARTH

      Appetizer Menu
      Yule Be Baffled Appetizer:
      “The Twelve Daze of Christmas”
      1.
      He’ll be home for Christmas!
      Name a small, but well-known city. Shift the letters six places later in the alphabet, and the result will be part of an animal you might find in that location, but not many other places in the US. This city might be one of the last stops on a couple of annual epic journeys. What is the city, and what is the animal part?
      Hint: The animal part has been oft used in art.
      ANSWER:
      Nome/ tusk
      2.
      Heading to that Holiday Party:
      Name something you might find as a part of traditional Christmas-time transportation in eight letters. Move the fifth letter seven places later in the alphabet to name something you might find in modern transportation.
      What are the two parts of transportation?
      Hint: The devices have a related intent, but the effect is the opposite.
      ANSWER:
      Blinders (for a horse, of course, of course); blinkers. Blinders are to keep a horse from turning inadvertently, blinkers are to signal your intent to turn.
      3.
      Party People:
      Name two well-known people. The last name of one is a homophone for a word that might describe a party, the last name of the other is a homophone of what you might hear from that party. The two first names are related things that might be a reason for having a party. Who are the two people?
      ANSWER:
      Oscar Wilde and Tony Blair - the latter associated with a different sort of Party.
      4.
      Holiday Fixings:
      Name a food you might see in a holiday dinner in the form of blank of blank. Spoonerize the first and last words, and the result will be a complaint people have about their computers. What are the two phrases?
      ANSWER:
      Rack of lamb, lack of RAM.
      5.
      Holiday Shopping:
      Name something in four letters you might receive in the holiday season. Shift those letters 12 places later in the alphabet and the result will be what the giver might have done to get that. What did you receive, and what did they have to do?
      Hint: This answer would have made no sense just 25 or so years ago, and is now ubiquitous.
      ANSWER:
      Gift/ surf
      6.
      ‘Tis the Season to be Stressed:
      Write two US Capital cities (in adjoining states) in order. Remove several of the consecutive letters to name a person who might help with holiday stress. What are the cities, and who is the person?
      ANSWER:
      Hel(ena B)oise, Heloise. As in "Hints from Heloise."
      7.
      Presents Past and Future:
      Name a popular toy in five letters. Shift the letters 19 places later (or 7 places earlier) in the alphabet, and the result will be a part of many toys and games. Both have been popular for thousands of years, and will likely remain so far into the future.
      Hint: The first toy is more often given to girls.
      ANSWER:
      Dolls, Wheel

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  19. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:
    “The Twelve Daze of Christmas,” continued:
    8.
    A Holiday Mishap in TV Guide:
    “Holiday centerpiece gets burned by spritely decoration. Holy Lucifer!”
    That is a fictitious TV Guide synopsis of an actual fantasy drama television series that had a nine-year run. The synopsis is based, alas, on a typographical error in the name of the show that some TV Guide proofreader missed! The typo involved one mistyped letter, like “Cheeks” instead of “Cheers.”
    What is the name of the original television show, and what was the TV Guide goof?
    Answer:
    Torched by an Angel (Touched by an Angel)
    9.
    Holidays Around the World:
    Name a well-known American brand that you might use during the holiday season, six letters. Add a letter to the end to get a holiday with origins in other places of the world.
    What is the brand name, and what is the holiday?
    Answer:
    Ramada + n = Ramadan
    10.
    Musical-Metro-Gnome
    Name a major city in two words. Remove one letter, and the result will be the last name of a well-known musician. Drop the letters indicating the continent of that city, and the result will be a famous holiday figure.
    What are the city, musician, and holiday figure?
    Answer:
    Santa Ana (California) → Santana -N.A. (North America) → Santa
    11.
    A Pair of Plants
    Name a species of plant that might be used during Christmas. Remove the last letter and you get a different species of the same type of plant. Note that these two plants grow in very different environments.
    What are the two plants?
    Answer:
    Balsam fir, Balsa
    12.
    “I’ll be ‘home’ (ASDFJKL) for Christmas”
    link to ‘home’ in “I’ll be ‘home’ (ASDFJKL) for Christmas”:
    https://www.computerhope.com/issues/ch001346.htm#:~:text=Your%20left-hand%20fingers%20should%20be%20placed%20over%20the,air%20or%20very%20lightly%20touching%20the%20spacebar%20key.
    For those not familiar, “typewriter words” consist of eight letters that use each finger on a standard typewriter once and only once... like the “plaudits” we hope you will give these Dozen Holidaze Appetizers! (P-L-A-U-D-I-T-S = right-pinky, right-ring, left-pinky, right-index, left-middle, right-middle, left-index, left-ring).
    Name a plant associated with the holiday season. Remove two consecutive letters, each that appears once earlier in the word. The result is a common misspelling of this plant that is a “typewriter word.”
    Answer: Poinset(ti)a=>
    (P-O-I-N-S-E-T-A = right-pinky, right-ring, right-middle, right-index, left-ring, left-middle, left-index, left-pinky)

    MENU

    Holiday Slice:
    “...and a pair of colors in a pear tree”
    The number 188,928 suggests a holiday beverage.
    The numbers 80,119 and 32,481 suggest a pair of colors associated with that holiday. Explain why these three numbers suggest this holiday beverage and two holiday colors.
    Hint #1: One of the holiday colors is a French word.
    Hint #2: French Hens
    Answer:
    The third letters in the digits of 188,928, in order, spell "eggnog," a traditional Chrismas beverage:
    onE eiGht eiGht niNe twO eiGht;
    The third letters in the digits of 80,119 and 32,481, in order, spell "green" and "rouge," traditional Christmas colors:
    eiGht zeRo onE onE niNe,
    thRee twO foUr eiGht onE
    Hint #2: "French hens" was the gift sent (for the first time) on "the THIRD day of Christmas" (in the carol "The Twelve Days of Christmas."

    Lego...

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  20. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:

    Riffing Off Shortz And Naharajan Slices:
    “Ribbity-Rabbity-Roo!”
    Will Shortz’s December 18th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Chip Naharajan of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, reads:
    If you change the third letter of WOLF to an O, you get the sound made by a dog — WOOF. Name a six-letter animal and change the second letter to get the sound made by a completely different animal. What is it?
    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Naharajan Slices read:
    ENTREE #1
    Name two nations that border the Pacific Ocean and a U.S. city that has been dubbed
    the “Heart of the Heartland.” Take the letters in either the first half or second half of the name of the city and the letters in the two nations. Rearrange these combined letters to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.
    Who is it?
    What are the two nations and “Heart of the Heartland” city?
    Answer:
    Chip Naharajan; China, Japan; Harrah (Oklahoma)

    Note: Entree #2 is a riff-off composed by Jeff Zarkin (SuperZee) whose “Puzzle Riffs” are featured regularly on Puzzleria! Entrees #3-through-? were created by Greg VanMechelen, whose “Econfusions” feature appears in this week’s Puzzleria!
    ENTREE #2
    If you change the third letter of WOLF to an O, you get the sound made by a dog — WOOF. Change NO letters in an animal to get what you see many Blaine’s Blog commenters (INSERT LINK) do each week in regard to the Weekend Edition Sunday National Public Radio puzzle? What is it?
    Answer:
    Carp
    ENTREE #3
    Name an animal in six letters. Change NO letters in this animal to get what many in Blainesville do each week in regard to the Weekend Edition Sunday NPR puzzle?
    Answer:
    Grouse
    ENTREE #4
    Take the name of any member of a certain successful rock group. Change the forth letter in that name to get the breed of a canine creature.
    Now take the first name of one particular member of the rock group. Change the first letter in that name to get a wild canine creature.
    What are this rock group member, and first canine creature?
    What is the first name and the wild canine creature?
    Answer:
    Beatle, Ringo; Beagle, Dingo
    ENTREE #5
    Name an animal in six letters. Add one letter to make a sound that a different fabled (but not fabulous) animal might make.
    What are this six-letter animal and sound from a fabled animal?
    Answer:
    Puffin, Puffing; (In the "Big Bad Wolf" fable, the wolf was huffing and puffing and blowing down two little pigs' straw and stick houses, but NOT blowing down the third little pig's brick house. Eco suggests that "Pigs should learn to build with straw!")
    ENTREE #6
    If you change the third letter of WOLF to an O, you get the sound made by a dog — WOOF. Name another four-letter animal and change the FIRST letter to get the sound made by a completely different animal. What is it?
    Answer:
    Mink; Oink (pig/sow/hog)
    ENTREE #7
    Add two letters to the beginning of an avian creature to get a sound made by a canine or ursine creature.
    Add two letters to the end of this sound to get a container (such as a pitcher, pail or can) for beverage bought in gallon or half-gallon quantities. Change the third letter in an ursine creature to get the name of this beverage.
    What is the avian creature and the sound made by a canine or ursine creature?
    What are the container, the ursine creature and the beverage?
    Answer:
    Owl, Growl; Growler, Bear, Beer;

    Lego...

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  21. This week's official answers for the record, part 4:
    Riffing Off Shortz And Naharajan Slices, continued:
    ENTREE #8
    Name a word for a five-letter newborn critter. Replace a two-letter greeting within it with either half of a four-letter slang term for “one that is remarkable or wonderful.” The result is the sound made by a this critter when it grows up.
    What are this critter and the sound it will make?
    What are the two-letter greeting and the slang term for “one that is remarkable or wonderful?”
    Answer:
    Chick, cluck; Hi, lulu
    ENTREE #9
    Name a word for a standardbred horse trained for harness racing which is also a word for a pig's foot that some people eat. Remove from the beginning the two initials from a Mt. Rushmore president. The result is a mammal of the weasel family with webbed and clawed feet and dark brown fur.
    What are this horse and weaselly mammal?
    Answer:
    Trotter, Otter; TRotter - T(heodore) R(oosevelt) = otter
    ENTREE #10
    Name a creature that hops. Move its initial letter to the end. The second half of the result spells a creature that flies that is not a fly. What are these hopping and flying creatures?
    Answer:
    Kangaroo, rook;
    ENTREE #11
    Name a silvery gray arboreal marsupial creature. Reverse the order of its final two letters and move the result to the beginning. The result sounds like a corporation which is a major global producer of a silvery gray metal.
    What are this silvery gray marsupial and this corporation that produces this silvery gray metal?
    Answer:
    Koala; Alcoa (aluminum)
    KOALA=> AL+KOA=> Alcoa, which is the eighth largest producer of the world's aluminum)
    Dessert Menu
    Tinselly Translation Dessert:
    “Clearly, thou art joking!”
    Translate the exclamation, “Clearly, thou art joking!” into English that is less stilted and more conversational.
    Your translation must contain three words and thirteen letters. Anagram those thirteen letters to form three new words:
    * two that are synonymous with “Christmas narrative,”
    * and one that is the literary spelling of the name associated with that narrative.
    What is your translation?
    What are the synonym of “Christmas narrative” and the literary spelling of the name associated with that narrative?
    Hint: The literary spelling of the name associated with that narrative is also how the name is spelled in the Shone, Sesotho, Yoruba and modern Venetian languages.
    Answer:
    "Surely you jest!" Yule story, Jesu
    Hint: "Jesus" is spelled "Jesu" in the Shone, Sesotho, Yoruba and modern Venetian languages.

    Lego!

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