Thursday, February 22, 2024

Suitable, Digital, Mythical, Rangy, Differential, Poetic Puzzles! “Everyday” prime time property; Acts of the Apostle Islands? Jimmy a door, adore a Jenny; Bend, shape and cause curvature; Ah, abandon a habit!

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED 


Schpuzzle of the Week:

Acts of the Apostle Islands?

Take the first four words of a verse in the King James Version of the Bible’s Book of Acts (of the Apostles, that is). Delete a preposition and a space. The result will be the names of two modern Middle Eastern countries. 

What are these two countries and the verse?

Appetizer Menu

Noddingly Approved Appetizer:

Suitable, Digital, Mythical, Rangy, Differential, Poetic Puzzles!

SUITABLE ARRANGEMENTS

1. ♠♦ The same letters can be arranged to spell eight words and one two-word phrase.  

Guess the words and the phrase from the following descriptions:

    1. Weapon

    2. No-frills

    3. Analyze

    4. Trims

    5. Major offenses

    6. Garners

    7. Copycats

    8. European or Asian food items

    9. In line with

DIGITAL FILMS

2. 🎥The title of a 1980’s film sounds like a number.  

Add the digits of the number to get a number that is the first word of the title of another 1980’s film. What films are they?

3. 🥛🦄Guess the names of the following deities from the Greek/Roman, Norse, and Egyptian pantheons of the ancient world, using the hints provided.  In some cases the hints are phonetic.

    1.  What the mother of a certain ancient ruler in the Middle East may have said when he was a child and spilled his milk.

    2.  Slopes from the vertical.  

    3.  What a lot of guys get as they age. 

    4.  Exists twice.

    5.  Five-sixths of a singing group.

    6.  Laid back.

    7.  80% of a sculptor, or 57% of a composer.

    8.  Blue gray color and a communication device.

    9.  Euphemism for an obscenity.

    10.  Fresh musical direction meaning twice.

HOME ON THE RANGE

4. 📖Think of a book for young readers about a young person growing up on the 19th Century American frontier.  The first word in the title names a person associated with a popular sport.  

The second word consists of a piece of equipment used in the sport, followed by a description of a part of the location where the sport is played.  The title is also the name the main character goes by.  Name the book, the piece of equipment, the part of the location, and the sport.

WHAT DIFFERENCE CAN ONE LETTER MAKE?

5. 😈😇An eight-letter adjective describes a kind of attitude. 

Add one letter somewhere in the word to describe how one might end up if he or she were to display such an attitude in dealing with employers or other powerful persons.

POETRY CORNER, by Anna Graham

6. 📕Fill in the blanks with four words that are anagrams of each other to complete the verse.

We _____, envision vast primeval seas,

Across the _____ of endless, leafless plain,

The _____ from which we sprang, and too the
trees,

That bore the _____ and pods with which, in vain,

We seek surcease of mortal earthly pain.

MENU

Scrapping The Chaps Hors d’Oeuvre:

Bend, shape and cause curvature

Take a word associated with the act of bending or causing curvature. 

Remove a number of letters that, in order, spell a synonym of “chaps.” 

Assign a number-value to the remaining letters: A=1, B=2. C=3, etc. 

The values of all ten of the remaining letters are evenly divisible by a single divisor (besides the number 1, of course). 

What is this “bendy-curvy” word? 

What is the synonym of “chaps”? 

What is the single divisor?

Dawn Quiche-Hymny Slice:

Jimmy a door, adore a Jenny

The donkey is a symbol of the Democratic Party. Jimmy Carter is a member of the Democratic Party who was elected president in 1976. 

“Jimmy” kind of sounds like “jenny,” a female donkey. One might say that, in 1976, Carter was “Jenny’s Jimmy” or the “Donkey’s Jimmy.” Alas, there is no famous singer whose name sounds like “Donkey’s Jimmy...” (Don Keeshimmy? Dawn Quiche-Hymny?)

However, can you name a famous singer whose name sounds like a symbol of a political party, in its possessive form, and the first name of that political party’s presidential candidate?

If so, who is the famous singer?

Riffing Off Shortz And Chaikin Slices:

“Ah, abandon a habit!”

Will Shortz’s February 18th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Andrew Chaikin of San Francisco, California, also known as the singer Kid Beyond, reads:

Think of a famous character in American
literature. Change each letter in that character’s name to its position in the alphabet: A=1, B=2, etc., to get a famous year in American history. Who is this person and what is the year?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Chaikin Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Take the two-word stage name of a singer who is also a puzzle-maker. Change each letter in the first word to its position in the alphabet — A=1, B=2, etc. — to get the year an Italian saint, a follower of Francis of Assisi, was born.
This saint founded a monastic religious order that followed a rule of strict poverty.

Similarly, change the first three letters in the second word to its position in the alphabet to get the year in the title of a “one-hit wonder” recorded by singers from Nebraska, a state surrounded by “squarish” states. Converting the final two letters in the second word results in a square number.

What is this stage name?

Who is, and in what year, was the saint born?

What is the square number formed by converting the last two letters of the stage name?

What are the year in the one-hit-wonder and the square number?

Note: The following riff was written by our friend Nodd, whose “Nodd ready for prime time” appears above, in this edition of Puzzleria!

ENTREE #2

Think of a famous year in American history. Change each digit in the year to the letter that corresponds to the digit when the letters of the alphabet are numbered from 1 to 26. The result will include two letters that are the same, and two that are different.

Now take the letter that corresponds to the two-digit number expressed by the two letters that are different. Insert that letter somewhere in the result. 

The final result will name something that many people needed in that year. 

What is the year, and what did people need?

Note: The following riff was written by our friend ViolinTeddy, whose “Strad-Steiff Subtleties” appears regularly on Puzzleria!

ENTREE#3

Name a famous opera character. Change each letter in that character’s name to its position in the alphabet to get a famous year in American history. 

Who is the character, and what is the year? 

Note: The following riff was written by our friend Plantsmith, whose “Garden of Puzzley Delights” appears regularly on Puzzleria!

ENTREE #4

Take the first part of the two-part name of a significant and acclaimed American band. 

Subtract this first part from a significant year in world history. 

The result is a not-as-significant historical year that, when translated via the alphanumeric scale, becomes a word for what is sometimes
an unpleasant  substance.

What are the two historical years? 

What is the significant and acclaimed band? 

What is the substance?

Note: The following riff is a collaboration of sorts between a regular contributor to Puzzleria! and Lego Lambda.

ENTREE #5
Take the first name of the writer and recorder of an early 1960s novelty song. The alphanumerical values of the letters in the name form a five-digit string. 

Delete the last digit. 
The result is a famous year in world history that is associated with a volley of cannon fire and ringing chimes.  
Now reconvert each of the four digits in this year into the letters that are their alphanumerical equivalents. The result is the name of the title character in the novelty song.
Who is the the writer and recorder of an early 1960s novelty song, and what is its title?
What is the famous year in world history, and why is it associated with a volley of cannon fire and ringing chimes?
ENTREE #6
Name a two-word annual celebration. Change each letter in those two words to its numerical value in the alphabet.
The first two and final three letters in the
celebration have values that are square numbers. 

The first two letters of the celebration, when placed side-by-side, also form a square number. The last two letters of the celebration, when placed side-by-side, form a cube number.
 Add together the values of the penultimate and antepenultimate letters to get the square root of one of these six square numbers. The antipenultimate value is the square root of the value of the first letter in the celebration. 
What is this annual celebration?
What, in descending order, are the six square numbers?
What is the cube number?
ENTREE #7
Christmas is usually a joyous day. The most recent Christmas fell on a day that can be written as “12/25/23”.
Write a not-so-joyous day in history in such a form. Indeed, it was a tragic day. 
Delete the sixth digit.
Find three values using these five digits:
1. the value of the sum of the last three digits,
2. the value of the last digit 
3. the value of the two-digit number formed by the first two digits.
Take the three letters of the alphabet that
correspond to these three values to spell the monogram of the victim of the tragedy.
Take two letters — one corresponding to the third digit and another corresponding to the fourth digit — to get a two-letter shot pellet measuring 0.175 inch in diameter that, had it been substituted for the 6.5 millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano rounds, would surely have averted the tragedy.
What is this tragic date in history?
What is the monogram?
What is the shot pellet 0.175 inch in diameter?
ENTREE #8
Think of a famous seven-letter character in American literature. 
Change each letter in that character’s name to its position in the alphabet — A=1, B=2, etc. Ignore the value of the middle letter’s position, a number which is said to be unlucky.
The result is six numbers.  
The fourth, third and sixth numbers form a famous year in French and Russian history.
The second, fifth and first numbers form a famous year in a nation where Barbie was born, the music died, and 48 became 50.
Who is this American literature character?
What is the famous year in French and Russian history?
What is the famous year in a nation where Barbie was born, the music died, and 48 became 50?
ENTREE #9
Think of a famous character in American literature. Change each letter in that character’s name to its position in the alphabet
— A=1, B=2, etc. — to get a famous year in American history. Replace the first two digits in that year with their sum and convert these three values back into their letter equivalents, to spell a character in British fantasy literature.
Who is this famous character in American literature?
What is the famous year in American history?
Who is the character in British fantasy literature?
ENTREE #10
Take the first eight numbers in a famous infinite mathematical sequence. Change each number in that sequence to its corresponding letter in the alphabet — A=1, B=2, etc. to get
eight letters. 
The first, seventh and eighth letters, followed by a space, followed by the third, fifth, second, fourth and sixth letters, spell the name of a recently built volleyball complex at a Florida institution of higher learning. That institution is situated in an unincorporated two-word community of about 6,000 population. That community’s initials are the first and seventh letters in the name of the volleyball complex. The name of this community is associated with the works of both Franz Schubert and Walter Scott.  
What are this sequence and name of the volleyball complex?
What is the name of the Shubert-and-Scott-related community where the institution is located?
ENTREE #11
Think of a historic and fateful date in American history in the form 02/23/24. Change each digit in the date to its alphanumeric equivalent: A=1, B=2, etc. Ignore any zeros. This date includes one zero.
Rearrange the five letters you get to spell the last word in the following statement about the date:
“In the wake of this gray day in U.S. history, the hopes and dreams of a recovering nation _____.”
What is this date?
What is the word in the blank?
Hint: The alphanumeric equivalents of the first two digits in the year of this historic date (the “20” in “2024,” for example) are the initials of the first names of the man who was the focus of this fateful day and of the man who would have succeeded him had the fateful date occurred six weeks earlier.    

Dessert Menu

More Mundane Dessert:

“Everyday” prime time property

857, 7,027 and 271 are all prime numbers. 

Name another perhaps more interesting “everyday” property they share – one that neither cleaves nor cottons to the conventional entertainment conception of “prime time.” 

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.

76 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    2. In Entree 7, it says: "Take two letters — one corresponding to the third letter and another corresponding to the fourth letter — to get a shot pellet ...." Are the "two letters" letters of a word, and if so, how do we get the word? If not, where do the two letters come from? Thanks.

      Delete
    3. Thanks, Nodd. The sentence should read:
      Take two letters — one corresponding to the third digit and another corresponding to the fourth digit — to get a two-letter shot pellet measuring 0.175 inch in diameter that, had it been substituted for the 6.5 millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano rounds, would surely have averted the tragedy.
      What is this tragic date in history?

      LegoApologetic

      Delete
    4. Thanks, Lego, that clears it up. I notice the two-letter shot pellet is also associated with a person involved in another tragedy.

      Delete
    5. Entree #10 states: "Who is this person and what is the year?" Shouldn't it ask for the community instead?

      Delete
    6. Also in Entree 10, "Who is this person and what is the year?" doesn't seem to relate to the puzzle.

      Delete
    7. Thanks, Tortitude and Nodd. I think I finally fixed it.

      LegoWhoSpentTheDayAtAState WrestlingTourney

      Delete
    8. Got pinned flat in five seconds flat!

      LegoWhose"Rasslin'Moniker"Is"TheHumanPancake!"

      Delete
    9. So sorry. I'd be a pancake too, totally battered.

      Delete
    10. For Entree #9, it states to "replace the first two digits in that year with their sum"; however, the answer I got involves concatenation (e.g., A (1) & C (3) would be replace by M (13), rather than D (4)).

      If it should be a sum, then I will need to go back to the drawing board on this one.

      Delete
    11. I have several questions on Entree 10:

      (1) We are told that the eight letters derived from the numerical sequence “can be rearranged” to spell the name of the volleyball complex. The answer I got does not require rearranging the eight letters; they are already in the right order.

      (2) The eight letters do not seem to be enough to spell the full name of the complex, as stated on what appears to be the institution’s website. Rather, the full name is four words containing 25 letters in total.

      (3) We are told that the initials of the community where the complex is situated “are the first and seventh letters in the name of the volleyball complex.” In my answer, the first and seventh letters in the name of the complex are not the initials of the community; rather, the first and second letters are. However, the first and seventh letters in the string of letters derived from the initial NUMERICAL SEQUENCE are the community’s initials.

      Perhaps I am misunderstanding the puzzle or my answer is incorrect in some way?

      Delete
    12. My answer for #10 matches yours.

      Delete
    13. Thanks, Tortie. I thought it must be right, but it just didn't seem to match all the puzzle criteria.

      Delete
    14. Tortie, I think your comment on Entree 9 must be correct Otherwise the Rowling hint doesn't make any sense.

      Delete
    15. Nodd,
      Thank you!
      you answer is correct. My text is faulty... really faulty!
      My apologies to you, Tortie and all solvers of Puzzzleria! puzzles!
      (1) You are correct, Nodd. No rearrangement of the eight letters is necessary.
      (2) You are also correct about the full name of the complex. it contains four words that begin with A, B, V and C, in 3, 5, 10 and 7 letters.
      (3) Indeed, the first and second letters ( not "first and seventh letters") of the complex are the initials of the community where the complex is situated. And, you are also correct in noting that "the first and seventh letters in the string of letters derived from the initial NUMERICAL SEQUENCE are the community’s initials."

      LegoWhoObviouslyConfusedHimselfDuringTheProcessOfConcoctingthisRiff!

      Delete
  2. Replies
    1. SUNDAY EVENING APPETIZER HINTS:
      1. See today’s NPR puzzle for a partial answer.
      2. Norma Jean, in the wind.
      3. (1) "Flowers" or "Rain."
      (2) Land of permanent shade.
      (3) "When I'm Sixty-Four."
      (4) Informally, female sibling, and then some.
      (5) Anna Graham says, think measures of time.
      (6) Anna Graham says, think measures of mass.
      (7) Mr. Crocetti.
      (8) To hell and back.
      (9) Anthrax song.
      (10) Frederick Forsyth critter.
      4. Escalade or Eldorado.
      5. Go for “broke.”
      6. Woodworking implement you can drink.

      Delete
    2. Some Late Monday Hints:

      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      Not Larry, Joe and Moe,
      More like Eeny, Miny and Moe...
      and an anagram of the fourth one.

      Noddingly Approved Appetizer:
      I shall allow Nodd to provide hints to his puzzles as he sees fit.

      Scrapping The Chaps Hors d’Oeuvre:
      Replace four consecutive letters in "the word associated with the act of bending or causing curvature" with five consecutive letters to get a synonym of "prudence."

      Dawn Quiche-Hymny Slice:
      A contemporary of Jimmy...

      Riffing Off Shortz And Chaikin Slices:
      ENTREE #1
      The one-hit-wonder?
      by Zager and Evans.
      ENTREE #2
      ENTREE #3
      ENTREE #4
      Note: I shall allow Nodd, ViolinTeddy and Plantsmith to give any hints they man deem necessary for Entrees #2, #3 and #4, respectively.
      ENTREE #5
      Fatima... rings, bells, bone!
      ENTREE #6
      ?? are square?
      No! ??? is round!
      ENTREE #7
      "...in the summer of his years."
      ENTREE #8
      The famous seven-letter character in American literature is an anagram of a 4-letter gender and possessive pronoun for that gender.
      ENTREE #9
      The the character in British fantasy literature is a Rowling wizard.
      ENTREE #10
      'Tis a "Golden Section Sequence."
      ENTREE #11
      Not Phone, not Shirley, not Clare Luce...

      More Mundane Dessert:
      “The first shall be last and...”

      LegOComeAllYeFaithfulPuzzleSolvers

      Delete
    3. E4- The substance is sometimes described as "sour."

      Delete
    4. E4- the substance has also been used as a weapon.

      Delete
    5. Thank you for the hints. Now just missing App #3 (parts 2, 8, and 9) and App #6.

      If anyone is stuck on anything else, even after the hints, I can provide some additional hints.

      Delete
    6. Forgot to mention that I also don't have Nodd's riff #2. Started to go through long lists with no luck.

      TortieWhoReallyIsn'tSureIfThisShouldGoUnderRiffsOrProgressReportsOrIfHereIsFine

      Delete
    7. Hints for Entree #2:
      1. The two-digit number expressed by the first two digits of the year, plus the two-digit number expressed by the last two digits of the year, is the number of states in the US in that year.
      2. The letter you add to get the word for what people needed is a Roman numeral.
      3. The word for what people needed is the first word in the title of a rom-com movie that came out six years after the year referred to in the puzzle. The second word in the movie title is associated with a US president, but was not his real name.

      Delete
    8. Tortie, here are hints on my puzzles you mention above, if you still need them:

      App #3(2): A more formal definition of the word is "to deviate from the vertical." It's often used in geology. The plural form is the name of the deity.

      App #3(8): The deity was the wife of the deity in App #3(2). The word for the color anagrams to a plural word that refers to one's "equals," and the same word is a verb that means "looks at keenly."

      App #3(9): The first word in the title of the Antrax song mentioned in the previous hint contains the name of the deity. The last word in the title is often used in a nautical context, or when people are claiming an election was "stolen."

      App #6: The cocktail mentioned in the previous hint is a gimlet.

      Riff #2: The cartoon character is a girl from "Peanuts."

      I am getting nowhere with the Dessert if you have any hints on that. I also haven't solved the Hors d'Oeuvre or Entrees 4, 6, or 9, though I have made some progress on those.

      Delete
    9. I did finally get Entree 6. Fun to solve, but quite a lot of work.

      Delete
    10. Nodd, thanks for the additional hints.

      For the Dessert, the words "everyday" and "time" are relevant. For the Hors d'Oeuvre, the first six characters are also the first six letters of a geometric measurement. Entree #4: The dates were a long time ago. The number in the musical group is a bit under 100. Entree #9: It's the initials of the character. (see my comment above, though; I think it's a concatenation and not a sum.)

      Delete
    11. Got Entree #11 finally, had the wrong last word.
      pjbSaysOtherThanThat,HeReallyEnjoyedThePlay(TooSoon?)

      Delete
    12. Thanks for the hints, Tortie. I got the musical group, I think, but other than that I drew a blank. Sigh.

      Delete
  3. Replies
    1. 1. A four-letter insulting term also has a scientific meaning. Add together the alphanumeric values of the four letters to get a two-digit number. Add those two digits together to get a one-digit number.

      Now add together, instead, the individual digits of the alphanumeric values of the four letters, to get another two-digit number. Add those two digits together to get the same one-digit number that is referred to in the preceding paragraph.

      What is the word? What is the one-digit number?

      Delete
    2. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    3. 2. SCHPUZZLE RIFF: Rearrange the letters of a place in the Book of Acts to name a comic strip character. Who is the character?

      Delete
  4. Replies
    1. Didn't have a lot of time to try working on the puzzles, but at least this week I REMEMBERED that P! was being posted Thurs. evening! Managed after a lot of searching (and a bit of logic) to find the answer to the Schpuzzle.

      As to Nodd's Appetizers, given my LOW percentage of ever solving anything of his, I am glad to have figured out 50%.....his #1, #4, and of his #3 ones: (3), (4), (7),(8), (9) and (10), altho I don't like (9) answer--it may well be wrong.

      No further luck after that, but I pretty much didn't even try...too tired. I'm not optimistic, however, about the Hors D'O, the Slice OR Dessert.

      Delete
    2. Good Friday to our whole team once again!
      Mom and I are fine. We went out with Bryan and Mia Kate to Jim 'N' Nick's earlier. I had a BBQ chicken sandwich with Morgan Co. White Sauce, a house salad with honey mustard dressing(tasty!), mac 'n' cheese, and a Coke Zero(with refill); Mom had pulled pork, corn on the cob and mac 'n' cheese; Bryan had ribs, but I've forgotten what sides he had; Mia Kate had boneless BBQ chicken(no sandwich), but I've forgotten her sides as well. I do know everyone had mac 'n' cheese but Bryan, and everyone drank Sprite but me. They basically discussed our having to transport Mia Kate and Maddy everywhere next week because Bryan and Renae are going on a cruise to the Panama Canal(A MAN, A PLAN, A CANAL-----PANAMA!)tomorrow for a little over a week, so between us and Morgan, we've got to make sure the girls make it to whatever appointments they have. Mia Kate also showed a few old photos of her with Maddy, and we discussed the early days of Chick-Fil-A, stuff like that. Then Mom and I got home, and together we did the "Rows Garden" puzzle(by my namesake)in the latest issue of GAMES/World of Puzzles Magazine, and here I am.
      MY PROGRESS SO FAR:
      I've solved Appetizer #2 and (4.) and (6.) from #3, got the Slice, and Entrees #1, #3(I'm pretty sure), #5, #8, and #10(I think). The rest will require hints from Lego, Nodd, VT, and PS, of course.
      Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and I hope this guy Shane Gillis is good when he hosts SNL tomorrow night(he never even got the chance to be a cast member!). Cranberry out!
      pjbAlsoNoticedMiaKateHadBowsDrawnOnHerFingernailsThatResembledScissors(AndSheOnlyJustNoticedThisWhenHeMentionedIt!)

      Delete
    3. What- no bathroom remodel update?
      Morgan Co. white sauce -is that Horseradish??

      Delete
    4. Got everything other than half of App #3 (missing first two and last three) and App #6, although I might be on the right track with that one. Also got the Riff.

      Delete
    5. Impressive, Tortie! I'm not nearly that far along.

      Delete
    6. The bathroom's just about done. Got the mirror, sink, shower, everything but another towel rack(but I'd rather keep the towel on the shower door myself).
      pjbMustHaveSaidEverythingButTheBathroomSink

      Delete
    7. I'm expecting pictures next time.

      Delete
    8. I can't provide pictures, but I have solved all of App #1, thanks to Nodd's hint! The deities one is still tricky, though.
      pjbIsCurrentlyInBed,SoHe'llSayGoodNightToAllForNow

      Delete
    9. I know. LOL. But you have to wonder about all these 24 hour bathroom remodel folks. 24 hours-really?

      Delete
  5. CORRECTION on App 3, item 7 -- 75% should be 57%. My apologies.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I wondered about that, NOdd. Figured I had the correct answer even though the composer percentage didn't work.

      Delete
    2. Your answer's correct. My counting, not so much.

      Delete
    3. Heh heh....you could have fobbed it off as Lego having done a typo!

      Delete
    4. Nope, it was my error, not his.

      Delete
    5. What?!?!?
      In the nearly ten years I have been cranking out this blog, I have never even once printed a tpyo... or made any other type of mistake. ViolinTeddy (aka as "ViolinTedditor") will, I am sure, vouch for my unblemished typographical record!

      LegoWhoDoesHoweverHave"TypoBlood"LikeCrimsonPrinter'sInkCoursingThroughHisVeins!

      Delete
    6. An amazing feet when you think about it. Unparelled or repeeteed.

      Delete
  6. My brother sent me this joke" "16 sodium sodium atoms walk into a bar followed by Batman." ???? Anyone know this?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's easily answered with a Google search. It's pretty clever.

      Delete
    2. Ha, got it without the search, which is surprising, as I don't know much about Batman. Hint: think musically.

      Delete
    3. Reminiscent of "The Pink Panther" and DEAD ANT, or "The Lone Ranger" and TO THE DUMP.
      pjbNoticingACommonThemeHere

      Delete
  7. SCHPUZZLE– YEMEN, ISRAEL; ACTS 2:22 – “Ye men of Israel, hear these words . . .”
    APPETIZERS
    1. SPEAR, SPARE, PARSE, PARES, RAPES, REAPS, APERS, PEARS, AS PER
    2. 9 TO 5 (“9, 2, 5”); SIXTEEN CANDLES
    3. OH, CYRUS! (OSIRIS); HADES; BALDER (BALDUR); IS, IS (ISIS); HORUS (FROM CHORUS); LOW-KEY (LOKI); FRIG (FRIGG); A NEW BIS (ANUBIS)
    4. CADDIE WOODLAWN; WOOD; LAWN
    5. INSOLENT; INSOLVENT
    6. SMILE; MILES; SLIME; LIMES.
    HORS D’OEUVRE ??
    SLICE – ELLA FITZGERALD (“ELEPHANT’S GERALD” (FORD))
    ENTREES
    1. KID 1194; BEYOND 2525, 144
    2. 1929; ALIBI
    3. AIDA; 1941
    4. 1492; 1394; 98 DEGREES; ACID
    5. RAY STEVENS; “AHAB THE ARAB”; 1812; 1812 OVERTURE
    6. PI DAY; 169, 25, 16, 9, 4, 1; 125
    7. 11/22/63; JFK; BB
    8. ISHMAEL; 1812; 1959
    9. AHAB; 1812; R.A.B. (REGULUS ARCTURUS BLACK)
    10. 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21 (A, A, B, C, E, H, M, U) from the Fibonacci series;
    “AMU BEACH VOLLEYBALL COMPLEX”; AVE MARIA UNIVERSITY
    11. 4/14/65; "FADED"
    DESSERT ??

    ReplyDelete
  8. Schpuzzle: YEMEN, ISRAEL; “YE MEN OF ISRAEL, HEAR THESE WORDS…” (Acts 2:22)
    App:
    1. 1. SPEAR, 2: SPARE, 3: PARSE, 4. PARES, 5. RAPES, 6. REAPS, 7. APERS, 8. PEARS, 9. AS PER
    2. 9 TO 5 (925); SIXTEEN CANDLES
    3. (Some pre hint, some post) 1. OSIRIS (“OH, CYRUS!”); 2. HADES; 3. BALDER; 4. ISIS; 5. HORUS (CHORUS); 6. LOKI (LOWKEY); 7. ODIN (RODIN, BORODIN); 8. PERSEPHONE; 9. FRIGG; 10. ANUBIS (A NEW BIS)
    4. CADDIE WOODLAWN, WOOD, LAWN, GOLF
    5. INSOLENT, INSOLVENT
    6. (Post hint 2: ) SMILE, MILES, SLIME, LIMES (Post hint 1: ) SNAP ??? GIMLET??? SLING??? SCREWDRIVER?? (Pre hint: ) STOOR, ROOST, TORSO, ROOTS
    Hors d’Oeuvre: CIRCUMFLEXION; MEN; 3 (letters whose positions are divisible by 3 are CFILORUX)
    Slice: ELLA FITZGERALD (elephants Gerald (Ford))
    Entrees:
    1. KID BEYOND; ST. CLARE, 1194; 144; IN THE YEAR 2525
    2. 1929, ALIBI
    3. AIDA; 1941
    4. 1492, 1394; 98 DEGREES; ACID
    5. RAY (STEVENS; -> 18125); AHAB the ARAB; 1812
    6. PI DAY; 169, 25, 16, 9, 4, 1; 125 (two values at end of puzzle: “add together…”: 5, “antepenultimate value:”: 4)
    7. 11/22/63; JFK; BB .
    8. ISHMAEL, 1812, 1959
    9. AHAB, 1812, RAB (Regulus Arcturus Black)
    10. FIBONACCI SEQUENCE ( 1 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 -> AABCEHMU), AMU BEACH; AVE MARIA
    11. 04/14/65 (date Lincoln was shot), FADED (Hint: Abraham (Lincoln), Hannibal (Hamlin))
    Dessert: Take the last letter of each digit. It will spell a time (e.g., EIGHT = T, FIVE = E, SEVEN = N -> TEN, NOON, ONE)

    Riff:
    1. JERK; 8 (10+5+18+11 = 44 =8; 1+5+1+8+1+1 = 17 = 8)
    2. VIOLET, OLIVET

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I misunderstood the Hors d'Oeuvre -- I thought the fact that the letters to be removed were "in order" meant that they were consecutive in the original word.

      Good job on the Dessert. I played around with spelling out the numbers but didn't think to take just the last letters.

      Delete
  9. Schpuzzle: Acts 2:22 YE MEN OF ISRAEL – OF = YEMEN, ISRAEL

    Appetizers:
    1.
    1. SPEAR
    2. SPARE
    3. PARSE
    4. PARES
    5. RAPES
    6. REAPS
    7. APERS
    8. PEARS
    9. AS PER
    2. 88 → SIXTEEN Candles
    3.
    1.
    2. HADES (never heard this word) [post-Tue-hint]
    3.
    4. ISIS
    5.
    6.
    7. RODIN – R = ODIN; BORODIN – BOR = ODIN
    8. PERSE + PHONE = PERSEPHONE
    9.
    10. A NEW BIS → ANUBIS
    4.
    5.
    6. SMILE, MILES, SLIME, LIMES (LIMES is a bit spurious; the other words fit well into the verse)

    Hors d'Oeuvre: ??

    Slice: ELLA FITZGERALD → ELEPHANT'S GERALD (Ford)

    Entrées:
    #1: KID BEYOND → 11,9,4 = 1194 (Clare of Assisi); 2,5,25 (In the Year 2525); 14,4 = 144
    #2: 1929 → AIBI + 12 = L → ALIBI
    #3: AIDA → 1941
    #4: 2648 – LED Zeppelin (1254) = ACID (1394) [post-Tue-hint]
    #5: RAY Stevens → 18125 – 5 = 1812 → AHAB the Arab
    #6: PI DAY→ 16,9; 4,1,25; squares = 16,9 → 169; cube = 1,25 → 125; squares = 169,25,16,9,4,1
    #7: 11/22/63 (JFK assassination) – 3 = 11226 → 10, 6, 11 → JFK, BB pellet
    #8: 4,3,6 = 1812 = A H L; 2,5,1 = 1959 = S E I → ISHAEL + 13 = M → ISHMAEL
    #9:
    #10: Fibonacci series 1 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 → AABCEHMU → AMU BEACH (volleyball), Ave Maria, FL
    #11: Assassination of Lincoln 04/15/65 → DAEFE → FADED Hint: AH → Abraham, Hannibal (Hamlin)

    Dessert: ??

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Spurious"? You obviously are not a cocktail connoisseur. :)

      Delete
  10. NODD RIFF ANSWERS:
    1. WIMP; 7
    2. VIOLET (OLIVET)

    ReplyDelete
  11. 2-27-24”
    Puzzelria 58/ degrees a.m. “Spring is a sputtering- all about. I saw the Yoshinos yesterday/ hello world. Did you miss me?”

    Schpuzzle:

    Appetizers:
    I, lance, iv,-larceny


    3. 1, ii.. Hades, iii
    4. Johnny Tremain, Johnny Bench A.K.A. Catcher extraordinaire.
    5. Omitted, Committed,

    6. Mortals, expanse, soil, seeds.// A,BBB,A- Device.

    Hors Dourve

    Slice


    Entrees.
    1. Kid Beyond, 1194, Clare of Assissi,
    2. 1929 - AIBI– +L = Alibi
    3. Aida- 1941 WW2.
    4.1492 -”98 Degrees” = 1394= Acid- ( I saw “98 degrees” on GMA in 2009)
    5. Ray Steven 18125- 1812 Ahab the Arab.
    6..7. 11/23/63 - Monogram JFK. BB.
    8.
    9.
    10.
    11.4/14/65” Faded:: Lincoln Assasination- AB-JWB


    Dessert, ??

    ReplyDelete
  12. SCHPUZZLE: ACTS 2:22 => YE MEN OF ISRAEL => YEMEN & ISRAEL

    APPETIZERS:

    1. SPEAR, SPARE, PARSE, PARES, RAPES, REAPS, APERS, PEARS, AS PER

    3. (1) TUT? (3) BALDUR (4) ISIS (7) ODIN (8) PERSEPHONE (9) FRIGG (10) ANUBIS

    4. CADDIE WOODLAWN [GOLF]


    ENTREES:

    1. KID BEYOND => 1194 [SAINT CLARE]; 2525 [ZAGER & EVANS; 144

    3. AIDA => 1941

    11. 04/14/65 => 41465 => DADFE => FADED

    NODD’S RIFF: CRIMEA? => MARCIE

    ReplyDelete
  13. Schpuzzle
    YEMEN, ISRAEL("Ye men of Israel, hear these words...")
    Appetizer Menu
    1.
    (1.)SPEAR
    (2.)SPARE
    (3.)PARSE
    (4.)PARES
    (5.)RAPES
    (6.)REAPS
    (7.)APERS
    (8.)PEARS
    (9.)AS PER
    2. "9 TO 5", 9+5=16, "SIXTEEN CANDLES"
    3.
    (4.)ISIS
    (6.)LOKI
    4. CADDIE WOODLAWN, CADDIE, WOOD, LAWN, GOLF
    5. INSOLENT, INSOLVENT
    6. SMILE, MILES, SLIME, LIMES
    Menu
    Sorry, no Hors d'Oeuvre.
    Dawn Quiche-Hymny Slice
    ELLA FITZGERALD(ELEPHANT'S GERALD, for Ex-President Ford, a Republican)
    Entrees
    1. KID BEYOND(Andrew Chaikin), 1194, 2525("In the Year 2525", by Zager and Evans, 1969), 5 squared is 25.
    2. 1929(year of the Stock Market crash), AIBI+L(12)=ALIBI
    3. AIDA, 1941(Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor)
    5. RAY STEVENS, "AHAB THE ARAB", 18125-5=1812
    8. ISHMAEL, 1812, 1959
    10. FIBONACCI SEQUENCE, AMU BEACH(volleyball), AVE MARIA(FL)
    11. ASSASSINATION OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN, 4/14/65(DADFE=FADED)
    I didn't get the Dessert either. Sorry.-pjb



    ReplyDelete
  14. I had never heard of the book "Caddie Woodlawn." Just read a nice review of it and think my granddaughters would like it. You can get the movie for free on U Tube. Quite the Tom Boy apparently.

    ReplyDelete
  15. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Acts of the Apostle Islands?
    Take the first four words of a verse in the King James Version of the Bible’s Book of Acts (of the Apostles, that is). Delete a preposition and a space. The result will be the names of two modern Middle Eastern countries.
    What are these two countries and the verse?
    Answer:
    Yemen, Israel;
    Acts 2:22 KJV: Ye men of Israel, hear these words; Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved of God among you by miracles and wonders and signs, which God did by him in the midst of you, as ye yourselves also know." (KJV: King James Version)

    Appetizer Menu
    Noddingly Approved Appetizer:
    Suitable, Digital, Mythical, Rangy, Differential, Poetic Puzzles!

    SUITABLE ARRANGEMENTS
    1. The same letters can be arranged to spell eight words and one two-word phrase. Guess the words and the phrase from the following descriptions:
    1. Weapon
    2. No-frills
    3. Analyze
    4. Trims
    5. Major offenses
    6. Garners
    7. Copycats
    8. European or Asian food items
    9. In line with
    Answer:
    SPEAR, SPARE; PARSE; PARES; RAPES; REAPS; APERS; PEARS; AS PER

    DIGITAL FILMS
    2. The title of a 1980’s film sounds like a number. Add the digits of the number to get a number that is the first word of the title of another 1980’s film. What films are they?
    Answer
    “9 TO 5” (925); 9 + 2 + 5 = 16; “SIXTEEN CANDLES”

    MYTHICAL DEITIES
    3. Guess the names of the following deities from the Greek/Roman, Norse, and Egyptian pantheons of the ancient world, using the hints provided. In some cases the hints are phonetic.
    1. What the mother of a certain ancient ruler in the Middle East may have said when he was a child and spilled his milk.
    2. Slopes from the vertical.
    3. What a lot of guys get as they age.
    4. Exists twice.
    5. Five-sixths of a singing group.
    6. Laid back.
    7. 80% of a sculptor, or 75% of a composer.
    8. Blue gray color and a communication device.
    9. Euphemism for an obscenity.
    10. Fresh musical direction meaning twice.
    Answers:
    1. “Oh, Cyrus!” → OSIRIS
    2. Hades (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hade) → HADES
    3. Balder → BALDUR
    4. Is is → ISIS
    5. CHORUS → HORUS
    6. Low-key →LOKI
    7. RODIN/BORODIN → ODIN
    8. PERSE + PHONE = PERSEPHONE
    9. FRIGG
    10. A new bis → ANUBIS

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  16. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:
    Noddingly Approved Appetizer, continued:

    HOME ON THE RANGE
    4. Think of a book for young readers about a young person growing up on the 19th Century American frontier. The first word in the title names a person associated with a popular sport. The second word consists of a piece of equipment used in the sport, followed by a description of a part of the location where the sport is played. The title is also the name the main character goes by. Name the book, the piece of equipment, the part of the location, and the sport.
    Answer:
    CADDIE WOODLAWN; WOOD; LAWN; GOLF

    WHAT DIFFERENCE CAN ONE LETTER MAKE?
    5. An eight-letter adjective describes a kind of attitude. Add one letter somewhere in the word to describe how one might end up if he or she were to display such an attitude in dealing with employers or other powerful persons.
    Answer:
    INSOLENT; INSOLVENT

    POETRY CORNER, by Anna Graham
    6. Fill in the blanks with four words that are anagrams of each other to complete the verse.
    We _____, envision vast primeval seas,
    Across the _____ of endless, leafless plain,
    The _____ from which we sprang, and too the trees,
    That bore the _____ and pods with which, in vain,
    We seek surcease of mortal earthly pain.
    Answer:
    SMILE; MILES; SLIME; LIMES


    ANSWERS:
    1. Answer:
    SPEAR, SPARE; PARSE; PARES; RAPES; REAPS; APERS; PEARS; AS PER
    2. “9 TO 5” (925); 9 + 2 + 5 = 16; “SIXTEEN CANDLES”
    3.
    1. “Oh, Cyrus!” → OSIRIS
    2. Hades (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hade) → HADES
    3. Balder → BALDUR
    4. Is is → ISIS
    5. CHORUS → HORUS
    6. Low-key →LOKI
    7. RODIN/BORODIN → ODIN
    8. PERSE + PHONE = PERSEPHONE
    9. FRIGG
    10. A new bis → ANUBIS
    4. CADDIE WOODLAWN; WOOD; LAWN; GOLF
    5. INSOLENT; INSOLVENT
    6. SMILE; MILES; SLIME; LIMES

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  17. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    MENU
    Scrapping The Chaps Hors d’Oeuvre:
    Bend, shape and cause curvature
    Take a word associated with the act of bending or causing curvature.
    Remove a number of letters that, in order, spell a synonym of “chaps.”
    Assign a number-value to the remaining letters: A=1, B=2. C=3, etc.
    All ten of these values (that correspond to the remaining letters) are evenly divisible by one divisor (besides the number 1).
    What is this “bendy-curvy” word?
    What is the synonym of “chaps”?
    What is the one divisor.
    Answer:
    Circumflexion; men; 3
    CIRCUMFLEXION - MEN = CIRCU FL XIO => 3, 9, 18, 3, 21, 6, 12, 24, 9, 15, which are all evenly divisible by 3.

    Dawn Quiche-Hymny Slice:
    Jimmy a door, adore a Jenny
    The donkey is a symbol of the Democratic Party. Jimmy Carter is a member of the Democratic Party who was elected president in 1976.
    “Jimmy” kind of sounds like “jenny,” a female donkey. One might say that, in 1976, Carter was “Jenny’s Jimmy” or the “Donkey’s Jimmy.” Alas, there is no famous singer whose name sounds like “Donkey’s Jimmy...” (Don Keeshimmy? Dawn Quiche-Hymny?)
    Name a famous singer whose name sounds like a symbol of a politcal party, in its possessive form, and the first name of that political party’s presidential candidate.
    Who is the famous singer?
    Answer:
    Gerald Ford; "Elephant's Gerald"; Ella FitzGerald
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  18. This week's official answers for the record, part 5:
    ENTREE #6
    Name a two-word annual celebration. Change each letter in those two words to its numerical value in the alphabet.
    The first two and final three letters in the celebration have values that are square numbers. The first two letters of the celebration, when placed side-by-side, also form a square number. The last two letters of the celebration, when placed side-by-side, form a cube number.
    Add together the values of the penultimate and antepenultimate letters to get the square root of one of these six square numbers. The antipenultimate value is the square root of the value of the first letter in the celebration.
    What is this annual celebration?
    What, in descending order, are the six square numbers?
    what is the cube number?
    Answer: Pi Day (16 9; 4 1 25);
    169, 25, 16, 9, 4, 1; 125
    ENTREE #7
    Christmas is usually a joyous day. The most recent Christmas fell on a day that can be written as “12/25/23”.
    Write a not so joyous day in history in such a form. Indeed, it was a tragic day.
    Delete the sixth digit.
    Find three values using these five digits:
    1. the value of the sum of the last three digits,
    2. the value of the last digit
    3. the value of two-digit number formed by the first two digits.
    Take the three letters of the alphabet that correspond to these three values to spell the monogram of the victim of the tragedy.
    Take two letters — one corresponding to the third letter and another corresponding to the fourth letter — to get a shot pellet measuring 0.175 inch in diameter that, had it been substituted for the 6.5 millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano rounds, would surely have averted the tragedy.
    What is this tragic date in history?
    What is the monogram?
    What is the shot pellet 0.175 inch in diameter?
    Answer:
    11/22/63; November 22, 1963, the day John Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated;
    JFK (2+2+6) (6) (11)
    BB (2+2)
    ENTREE #8
    Think of a famous seven-letter character in American literature. Change each letter in that character’s name to its position in the alphabet — A=1, B=2, etc. Ignore the value of the middle letter’s position, a number which is said to be unlucky.
    The result is six numbers.
    The fourth, third and sixth numbers form a famous year in French and Russian history.
    The second, fifth and first numbers form a famous year in a nation where Barbie was born, the music died, and 48 became 50.
    Who is this American literature character?
    What is the famous year in French and Russian history?
    What is the famous year in a nation where Barbie was born, the music died, and 48 became 50?
    Answer:
    Ishmael (Herman Melville's "Moby Dick");
    1812 (Russia fends of an invasion by Napoleon)
    1959 (Buddy Holly, the Big Bopper and Richie Valens die in a plane crash, the Barbie Doll comes to the U.S., and Alaska and Hawaii become the 49th and 50th U.S. states.)
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  19. This week's official answers for the record, part 6:
    ENTREE #9
    Think of a famous character in American literature. Change each letter in that character’s name to its position in the alphabet — A=1, B=2, etc. — to get a famous year in American history. Replace the first two digits in that year with their sum and convert these three values back into their letter equivalents, to spell a character in British fantasy literature.
    Who is this famous character in American literature?
    What is the famous year in American history?
    Who is the character in British fantasy literature?
    Answer:
    Ahab (Herman Melville's "Moby Dick"); 1812;
    R.A.B. (Regulus Arcturus Black, a wizard created by J. K. Rowling)
    ENTREE #10
    Take the first eight numbers in a famous infinite mathematical sequence. Change each number in that sequence to its corresponding letter in the alphabet — A=1, B=2, etc. to get eight letters.
    The first, seventh and eight letters, followed by a space, followed by the third, fifth, second, fourth and sixth letters, can be rearranged to spell the name of a recently built volleyball complex at a Florida institution of higher learning. That institution is situated in an unincorporated two-word community of about 6,000 population. That community’s initials are the first and seventh letters in the name of the volleyball complex. The name of this community is associated with the works of both Franz Schubert and Walter Scott.
    What are this sequence and name of the vollyball complex?
    Who is this person and what is the year?
    Answer:
    The Fibonacci Sequence:
    1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21 (A A B C E H M U); Amu Beach (Vollyball Complex), at Ave Maria University in Ave Maria, Florida
    ENTREE #11
    Think of a historic and fateful date in American history in the form 02/23/24. Change each digit in the date to its alphanumeric equivalent: A=1, B=2, etc. Ignore any zeros. This date include one zero.
    Rearrange the five letters you get to spell the last word in the following statement about the date:
    “In the wake of this gray day in U.S. history, the hopes and dreams of a recovering nation _____.”
    What is this date?
    What is the word in the blank?
    Hint: The alphanumeric equivalents of the first two digits in the year of this his historic date (the “20” in “2024,” for example) are the initials of the first names of the man who was the focus of this fateful day and of the man who would have succeeded him had the fateful date occurred six weeks earlier.
    Answer:
    04/14/65 (The day that John Wilkes Booth assassinated Abraham Lincoln); "faded"
    Hint: Lincoln's first-term vice president, Hannibal Hamlin, was replaced by Andrew Johnson for Abraham Lincoln's second term. Hamlin's las day as vice president was March 4, 1865. A(braham) and H(annibal) are the alphanumeric equivalents of 1 and 8, the first two digits in 1865.

    Dessert Menu
    More Mundane Dessert:
    “Everyday” prime time property
    857, 7,027 and 271 are all prime numbers.
    Name another perhaps more interesting “everyday” property they share – one that does not cleave to the conventional entertainment conception of “prime time.”
    Optional Hint: Midday hours
    Answer:
    The last letters of their digits, in order, spell midday times: "ten," "noon" and "one.," not "prime times" as defined by television networks.
    (eighT fivE seveN; seveN zerO twO seveN; twO seveN onE)

    Lego!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lego, I can't seem to find the answers for Entrees 1 through 5. There also seems to be a duplication of the Appetizer answers?

      Delete