Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Folklore Creature, Feat & Feature... “One creature great and two small” Analgesic, Anesthetic, “Algiacide?” Feathered phoenix? Growling griffin? Self-defining geology; Pyrotechnics galore and s’mores; Beachcombed seashells & bombshells in the breech

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Feathered phoenix? Growling griffin?

Place a body of water in front of the surname of a literary character. 

The first seven letters of this eleven-letter result spell a kind of bird. 

The last five letters spell a body part. 

The second, third, fourth, sixth and tenth
letters spell a second bird, one associated with a Greek mythological character... but not in a good way. 

Name these two characters, two birds, and body part.

Valued Gifted Appetizer:

Folklore Creature, Feat & Feature...

Note: The six puzzles in this our featured Appetizer this week come courtesy of a very valued and greatly gifted Puzzleria! contributor.

Double-Duty Adjective

1. 👿Take the name of a well-known creature from folklore and an adjective often used for that creature. There are nine letters total in those two words. 

The second letter in the name of the creature and the last letter of the adjective are the same. Change one of those letters to an “h”. Arrange the resulting letters to name a unit of distance to which the adjective could also apply. What are the three words? 

Features physical and “filmy”

2. ✋👣 Take a term for a body part. Take a general term for a vacation destination. 

Combine those two terms to name a locale of many a physical feat as well as the setting of a cinematic fete and feature. What is the cinematic fete? 

Minnesota Delaware Hawaii Houston

3. ⅭⅭⅭⅩⅬⅥ Delaware Hawaii Minnesota is
346. 

So is Houston, Texas. 

Explain it. 

Describing “the nondescript

4. 🏈🏀🏒 Take nothing that looks like something that’s certainly not nothing in college sports at the moment. 

Add the postal abbreviation of a U.S. State at the beginning and the postal abbreviation of a different U.S. State at the end. 

The result is a word that can describe “the nondescript.” What is it? 

Capistrano Degrees of Difficulty

5. 🐦Take something that’s impossible to
swallow. 

Insert an element symbolically to get something that’s hard to swallow. 

What are they? 

‘Scuse me while I kiss this guy!’’

6. 👂🙉👂In puzzling, there’s “phonetically,” “sounds like,” and even “sounds somewhat like.” 

Then there’s a word for a lyric heard but neither sung nor spoken. Take that word. Remove a letter. The remainder, if spoken aloud, sounds like when a certain person may go or where a certain person called by that same term aims to go as efficiently as possible. What is that common term for such persons?

🌙🌕Bonus Appetizer #6 Riff by Lego (Joe Young):

As this week’s Appetizers author so eloquently put it in his #6 puzzle above, examples of “a lyric heard but neither sung nor spoken” occur in Jimi Hendrix’s “Purple Haze” (“‘Scuse me while I kiss this guy!”) and Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Bad Moon Rising” (“There’s a bathroom on the right!”).

But why do my ears (my ears, in particular) perk up when I hear a 1973 hit-single Southern Gothic murder ballad written by a guy whose wife recorded it?

What is this song title? 

At what exact point in the song do my ears experience this up-perk? 

MENU

Earth Studies Hors d’Oeuvre:

Self-defining geology

Name a two-syllable singular noun for any one of many geological masses on the earth’s surface. 

Rearrange the first three plus last two letters of this noun to get a word that describes these masses. 

Rearrange three consecutive interior letters to get a what these masses are made up of. 

What are these three words?

Heriotic Slice:

“One creature great, two small”

Remove a vowel from a large creature. 

Move the resultant space two places to the right. 

The final result is a small creature preceded by what sounds like another small creature. What are these three creatures?

Bonus Independence Day Slice:

Pyrotechnics galore and s’mores

“After we witnessed the _________ display that painted, Pollock-like, the midnight-blue canvas above us, we sat around a bonfire, armed with graham crackers, chocolate bars, and marshmallows that we impaled onto extended ____ _____ before caramelizing them as near the flames as we dared.”

Spoonerize the syllables of the compound word in the first blank to produce the two words in the second and third blanks.

What words belong in the three blanks?

Riffing Off Shortz And Kalish Slices:

Beachcombed seashells & bombshells in the breech

Will Shortz’s June 30th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Evan Kalish of Bayside, New York, reads:

Name a state capital. Remove its first two letters, and you can rearrange the rest to name something in two words that you might find while beachcombing in that state. What is it?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Kalish Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Take an adjective and noun, each five letters, that describe a man who during the Korean War commanded the most powerful assemblage of air power ever employed at sea. 

This man’s nickname is the five-letter noun. A word describing the air power is the five-letter adjective.

Rearrange those ten letters to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.

Who is this puzzle-maker?

Who is the Korean War man? What is the two-word adjective describing him?

Note: Entree #2 is the brainchild of our friend who is the author of this week’s “Baker’s-Half-Dozen Appetizer: Folklore creature, Feat & Feature.”

ENTREE #2

Take two capitals in the United States in alphabetical order. 

Add the postal abbreviation of a U.S. state. 

The result is the name of a national capital. 

What is the national capital?  

Note: Entree #3 is the brainchild of our friend Tortitude, whose “Tortie’s Slow But Sure Puzzles appears regularly on Puzzleria!

ENTREE #3

Name an inland U.S. state capital within a coastal state. Remove its first two letters. 

You can rearrange the remaining letters to spell a beach city on the opposite coast.

What is the capital? 

What is the beach city?

Note: Entrees #4 through #9 are the brainchildren of our friend Nodd, whose “Nodd ready for prime time” appears regularly on Puzzleria!

ENTREE #4

Name a state capital. You can rearrange its letters to name something beachgoers are often trying to get. 

What is the capital, and what are the beachgoers trying to get?

ENTREE #5

Name a state capital. 

Remove its last two letters, and you can rearrange the rest to name something most people are likely to have at the beach. 

What is the capital, and what are people likely to have at the beach?

ENTREE #6

Name a state capital. 

Change its first vowel to a different vowel and rearrange the letters to name someone you might see while at the beach. 

What is the capital, and whom might you see at the beach?

ENTREE #7

Name a state capital. 

Rearrange six of its letters to name a European city that is well-known for its beaches. 

The first three of those six letters name something some people do at the beach.  

What are the capital and the European city? 

What do some people do at the beach?

ENTREE #8

Name a state capital and remove its last letter. 

Rearrange the rest of its letters to get a word that may describe piers and similar structures
you might see at a beach. 

What are the capital and the descriptive word?

ENTREE #9

Name a state capital. 

Rearrange its letters to name something people typically take with them for a day at the beach. 

Rearrange again to describe many of the people you are likely to see at the beach. 

What is the capital? 

What do people typically take with them? 

What word describes many of the people you are likely to see?

ENTREE #10

Name something, in five letters, that you might see fishers using on a beach, followed by a three-letter synonym of that something. Replace the vowel in the three-letter synonym with a vowel that appears only once in what the fishers on the beach use.

Rearrange these eight letters to spell the surname of someone you might see on the beach... at least according to a guy whose surname is something you see on the beach that might be good (and filled with refreshment!) if it is not broken, but bad if it is broken.

What is it that fishers use, and its synonym?

Whom might you see on the beach, according to that guy with the surname, and just who is that guy, anyway!?

Hint: The five-letter something fishers use is also the name of a well-known river.

Dessert Menu

Kill The Pain Scratch The Itch Dessert:

Analgesic? Anesthetic? “Algiacide?”

Rearrange the letters in a synonym of “pain killers” to spell a synonym of “itch” and an apostrophized word preceding “Pills” in a brand-name pain-killer. 

What are these two synonyms and apostrophized word?

Hint: The letters in the synonym of “itch” appear consecutively, but not in order, within the synonym of “pain killers.”

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 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.

44 comments:

  1. Replies
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    1. SUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 4-9:
      4. The thing beachgoers want to get may not be a thing after all.
      5. What is removed is a number.
      6. Remove a letter from the person you might see at the beach and rearrange to name a U.K. beach.
      7. The European city is the name of a lot of restaurants in the U.S.
      8. The descriptive word is associated with Hamlet.
      9. Remove a letter and rearrange to get an animal you might find at a beach.

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    2. EARLY MORNING MONDAY HINTS:
      Puzzlerian! puzzle solvers ought to have no difficulty solving Nodd's six excellent and challenging riffs. Nodd himself has graciously provided hints to them, above. But I too have provided hints to them, below, in my "comprehensive hint package!"

      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      Feathered phoenix? Growling griffin?
      Jonathan Livingston

      Appetizer Menu
      Baker’s-Half-Dozen Appetizer:
      Folklore creature, Feat & Feature
      1. Buzz
      2. A homophone of the "term for a body part" might be found in a river or a lake... a lake which is a hint to the "general term for a vacation destination."
      3. Send a letter or, better yet, make a phone call on your old-school telephone.
      4. The "nothing" rhymes with the first name of a puzzle-maker.
      5. The something that’s IMPOSSIBLE to swallow is an anagram of "Biden lie."
      6. "...when a certain person may go?..." at a traffic light!
      "...where a certain person called by that same term aims to go as efficiently as possible?..." on the links!
      Bonus Riff to Appetizer #6, by LegoLambda (Joe Young):
      "I'm your best friend and you know that's right, Bu_ ____ _____bride ain't home tonight..."

      Earth Studies Hors d’Oeuvre
      Self-defining geology
      These "geological masses" on the earth’s surface tend to be quite a bit more than a tad chilly.

      Heriotic Slice:
      “One creature great, two small”
      Rearrange the eight letters of the large creature to spell a writing tool and a wood-smoothing tool.

      Bonus Independence Day Slice:
      Pyrotechnics galore and s’mores
      Colorful symmetrical pyrotechnics and Nabisco-Hershey-Jet-Puffed stuff

      Riffing Off Shortz And Kalish Slices:
      Beachcombed seashells & bombshells in the breech
      ENTREE #1
      Admiral Paul H. Ramsey
      ENTREE #2
      The "two capitals in the United States in alphabetical order" are NOT Albany and Bismarck, Columbus and Dover, Hartford and Indianapolis... No, these United States capitals are MUCH shorter than that!
      ENTREE #3
      One capital is also a District; the other is... a kind of Barbie!
      ENTREE #4
      You can also rearrange the letters of this state capital to name a Philadelphia Phillies aficionado and where he or she may watch the Phillies from.
      ENTREE #5
      This state capital is apt to take flight at any time!
      ENTREE #6
      Change the third consonant of the state capital to a different consonant to describe the population of New Jersey compared to the population of Alaska.
      ENTREE #7
      Lajoie!
      ENTREE #8
      Folks who own their own home do ___ have to ____.
      Anagram to combined letters in the blanks to get the state capital.
      ENTREE #9
      Name a state capital.
      Don't rearrange its letters, but add an "s" to the end, to name something a nicotinomaniac may take with him for a day at the beach.
      ENTREE #10
      You may notice, in the middle picture of the triptych that accompanies the puzzle, fishers making use of this "something."

      Dessert Menu
      Kill The Pain Scratch The Itch Dessert:
      Analgesic? Anesthetic? “Algiacide?”
      Name a Disneyworld attraction. Move its middle letter two places earlier in the alphabet (C becomes A, D becomes B, etc.). Move the other letters just one place earlier in the alphabet (C becomes B, D becomes C, etc.). Insert an apostrophe someplace to get the apostrophized word preceding “Pills” in a brand-name pain-killer.

      LegoFeelingNoPain(ButLotsaAngst!)

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    3. Dessert- I have seen a lot of drug product adds now on T.V. but never this one.??

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    4. Thank you, Nodd and Lego, for the hints. I was able to solve many of the Entrees I was missing (well, at least I got #8 before the hints!).

      However, I am still stuck on #7. It looks like VT is having the same problem. I thought I had found the beach city pre hint, and based on the hints, that is the correct beach city. However, none of the capitals I found contain all of the letters from that beach city; in fact, they are all missing the same letter ("E"). I even spelled out one of the capital names, and it's still missing the "E".

      Is there a trick to this one? Maybe it's not a U.S. state capital? Or am I just missing something? Any help would be appreciated; thanks!

      P.S. I also got App #3 thanks to the hint. I had to tweak App #6 a bit. Still missing App #2.

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    5. Think I finally figured out App #2.

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    6. If my guess about Entree #5 is correct, you can't really drop the last two letters and rearrange to get that answer. You can drop the fourth and sixth letters, then rearrange the remaining letters. I know my family has one at the beach.
      pjbAlsoGotApps#4and#5andEntree#1(finally!)

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    7. pjb, you may have an alt. I have an answer that fits the instructions exactly.

      I agree that Entree #1 was harder than normal. I had to take educated guesses to solve it.

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    8. Tortie, sorry for the delayed response to your question on Entree 7. Yes, you could say there's a trick, of sorts. You need to think of the beach city name using the language spoken in the country where the city is located; that will rid you of the "E" problem.

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  3. Replies
    1. Pretty meager so far this week----only the Schpuzzle, the song itself for the Appetizer Riff of #6 which was easily Google-able, the Bonus Slice, Entrees 1 and 3, plus the Dessert. Thought I had found the famous European beach city for Entree 7, but could see NO state capital that contains all its letters.

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    2. Got the Schpuzzle, Hors d'Oeuvre, Slice, bonus Slice, Dessert, Apps 1 & 6 (I think), bonus App, and Entrees 1, 3 (duh), and 10. Wasn't really in the mood for the past two days to put much effort into capital anagrams, so hopefully will make progress on the Entrees today.

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    3. Forgot to mention VT's comment: I thought Entree 7 looked more solvable than most of the Entrees. I think I found the same beach city as VT because I found three (!) possibilities for the capital but they are all missing the same letter that would enable the puzzle to work.

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    4. Finally got another App (#4) and two more Entrees (I think) - #4 and #8. It's gonna take a long time to solve the puzzles this week.

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    5. While I have yet to digest all today's hints, Tortie, I did look at #7 again, tried to look up restaurants with the city's name that I suspect we both chose, and can't find any. Thus I must conclude that we have chosen the WRONG beach city!

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    6. Finally figured out Entree 7...had the right city, but the wrong 'spelling'

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    7. VT, thanks for that. I did find another 'spelling' for that city in Wikipedia. I think my answer is still wrong, though, as no rearrangement is necessary.

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    8. I did noticed, Tortie, that the newly spelled European beach city did 'sit' unrearranged inside the US capital city, but I called it good at that point!

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  4. Kudos to the anonymous arbiter of advanced and artful appetizers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agreed! They're very well written; i just wish I could solve more of them.

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  5. Good Friday to all the blog regulars out there!
    Mom and I are fine. We didn't eat out tonight. Bryan, Renae, and the kids
    decided to eat out last night, and to hear them tell it, they were too tired to do it again tonight. So Mom decided to eat her leftovers from Full Moon BBQ last night, and she used some of our Hardee's coupons for me. She had ribs and a few sides, and I had the Frisco Angus Burger, with fries, a Diet Dr. Pepper, and a cinnamon roll. Last night for supper she got me some Wendy's "Saucy Nuggs"(spicy Buffalo), with ranch dipping sauce, the Baconator Fries, a Diet Dr. Pepper, and a Cinnamon Pull-Apart. I didn't really want anything from Full Moon, and I'd seen the Saucy Nuggs advertised. We also watched "A Capitol Fourth" on PBS, "Macy's Fireworks Spectacular" on NBC, and "Thunder on the Mountain" (the local fireworks broadcast on WBRC FOX 6 in Birmingham). WBRC also had some special programming afterward to mark their 75th year on the air. It was fascinating. They first broadcast in color in 1966, and the first color show was "The Bear Bryant Show". They interviewed past news anchors, and mentioned the few Bama-born success stories from "American Idol". It made the night even more special than if it were just the regular Fourth of July specials on TV. Tonight we watched "Lingo", and then I did my other puzzles, and here I am.
    As far as this week's P! goes, I've only been able to solve the Schpuzzle and the Dessert. I also know the word in App #6 and the song in the Bonus, but I couldn't get any further than that with either of them. Looking forward to seeing the HINTS section for additional help between now and Wednesday.
    Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and if anyone out there is just having their supper right now, I say "Bon Appetit!" Cranberry out!
    pjbEvenScannedTheSong'sLyrics,AndHeStillCouldn'tFigureOutWhatWouldMakeLego"PerkUpHisEars"!

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    Replies
    1. But, cranberry, did you just read the lyrics, or listen to them?

      LegoUrgesAllToListenAndThenAsksDoYouHearWhatIHear?

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    2. Even though I have heard this song in recent memory, thanks to Casey Kasem on SiriusXM, I only really remember the chorus and the ending. You can take an educated guess based on the printed lyrics, then go listen on YouTube.

      TortieWhoThinksThatWatchingMama'sFamilyWon'tAnswerThisButLookingAtHowThePuzzleIsPresentedMight

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    3. Here's another ." In the garden of Eden baby- don't you know that I love you." One of the longest songs on radio- play -but actually seldom played- I believe.I think it was 11 minutes long, but Tort will know.

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    4. In my Bonus Appetizer #6 riff, the mondegreen that "up-perked my ears" precedes the word "bride."

      LegoWithGeorgiaOnHisMind

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    5. After another quick perusal of the lyrics, I can see what Lego must have misheard just before "bride". Guess I've solved that one now! Thanks, Lego!
      pjbKnowsSupperWillBeWaitingAtHomeForHimToo,AndHe'sGotToGetToIt

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  6. SCHPUZZLE – LEMUEL GULLIVER, PROMETHEUS; SEAGULL, EAGLE; LIVER
    APPETIZERS
    1. YETI; LARGE; LIGHT YEAR
    2. ?
    3. The letters D H M (as in Delaware, Hawaii, and Minnesota) appear as numerals 3, 4, and 6 on an old-style rotary phone dial. Area code 346 is for Houston, Texas and the surrounding cities.
    4. NIL; VANILLA
    5. INEDIBLE; INCREDIBLE (CHROMIUM)
    6. MONDEGREEN; “ON THE GREEN”
    Bonus Appetizer #6 Riff by Lego – “THE NIGHT THE LIGHTS WENT OUT IN GEORGIA”; “I'm your best friend and you know that's right, But your young bride ain't home tonight …”
    HORS D’OEUVRE – GLACIER; LARGE; ICE
    SLICE – ELEPHANT; ELF, ANT
    BONUS INDEPENDENCE DAY SLICE – FIREWORKS, WIRE FORKS
    ENTREES
    1. EVAN KALISH; PAUL HUBERT RAMSEY; NAVAL SHEIK
    2. SUVA, FIJI
    3. COLUMBIA, SC; MALIBU, CA
    4. SANTA FE; SAFE TAN
    5. PHOENIX; PHONE
    6. DENVER; VENDOR
    7. INDIANAPOLIS; NAPOLI; NAP
    8. TRENTON; ROTTEN
    9. SALEM; MEALS; MALES
    10. SEINE; NET; EINSTEIN; PHILIP GLASS
    DESSERT – ANODYNES; YEN; DOAN’S

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  7. Schpuzzle: GULLIVER, SEAGULL, EAGLE, LIVER
    App:
    1. YETI, LARGE, LIGHTYEAR
    2. (Post hint: ) MUSCLE BEACH PARTY
    3. (Post hint: ) D = 3 on telephone keypad, H is 4, M is 6; 346 = Houston Texas area code
    4. VANILLA (NIL = zero, but also can stand for Name, Image, and Likeness)
    5. INEDIBLE (+CR, chromium), INCREDIBLE
    6. (Post hint: ) DRIVERS (Pre hint: GOLFERS) (MONDEGREEN -M -> ON THE GREEN)
    Bonus app: THE NIGHT THE LIGHTS WENT OUT IN GEORGIA (Vicki Lawrence, written by Bobby Russell); “BUT YOUR YOUNG” -> JOE YOUNG
    Hors d’Oeuvre: GLACIER, LARGE, ICE
    Slice: ELEPHANT (remove second E -> EL PHANT -> ELPH ANT), ELF, ANT
    Bonus slice: FIREWORKS, WIRE, FORKS
    Entrees:
    1. EVAN KALISH; PAUL RAMSEY; NAVAL SHEIK
    2. (Post hint: ) SUVA (capital of Fiji; SU (United States capitals) + VA)
    3. COLUMBIA, MALIBU
    4. SANTA FE, SAFE TAN
    5. (Post hint: ) PHOENIX, PHONE
    6. (Post hint: ) DENVER, (change E to O) VENDOR
    7. (Post hint: ) NAPOLI (another name for NAPLES), INDIANAPOLIS or ANNAPOLIS
    8. TRENTON, ROTTEN
    9. (Post hint:) SALEM, MEALS, MALES (but if it’s SURF CITY, then it’s two girls for every boy!)
    10. SEINE, NET; EINSTEIN, PHILIP GLASS
    Dessert: ANODYNES, YEN, DOAN’S

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  8. I have posted my answers TWICE now, and yet they keep vanishing. I don't know what to do.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Just tried for a third time. I can't understand this. There are no answers that the system would 'censure' as has happened in the past.

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  10. Trying to post in pieces this time:

    SCHPUZZLE: SEA GULLIVER => SEAGULL & LIVER; EAGLE

    APPETIZERS:

    1. YETI, LARGE => LIGHTYEAR

    3. LETTERS ON LANDLINE PHONE BUTTONS: “3” for “D”, “H” for “4”, “M” for “6”; “T” for “8"

    4. "NIL" & VA & LA => VANILLA

    5. INEDIBLE & CR (for Chromium) => INCREDIBLE

    6 RIFF: “THE NIGHT THE LIGHTS WENT OUT IN GEORGIA” “TYOUR YOUNG”?

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  11. 3. COLUMBIA, SC => LUMBIA => MALIBU

    5. PHOENIX => PHOEN => PHONE

    6. DENVER (Hint: DENSER) => VENDOR

    7. INDIANAPOLIS => NAPOLI / NAP

    8. TRENTON (Hint: NOT RENT) => ROTTEN

    9. SALEM => MEALS

    10. SEINE NET => SEINE NIT => EINSTEIN? [This doesn’t make much sense to me]

    DESSERT: ANODYNES => DOANS [PILLS] & YEN

    ReplyDelete
  12. I finally figured out that one word (modifying the SLICE) was what was causing my entire middle section to not be accepted. Sadly, while I was attempting to REMOVE that word from my draft answers, the entire saved answers vanished. Oh well..

    ReplyDelete
  13. Schpuzzle
    SEA,(Lemuel)GULLIVER, PROMETHEUS, SEAGULL, EAGLE, LIVER
    Appetizer Menu
    1. YETI, LARGE, LIGHT YEAR
    2. MUSCLE+BEACH=MUSCLE BEACH, "MUSCLE BEACH PARTY"
    3. D, H, and M are seen on a rotary phone with the numbers 3, 4, and 6;
    346 is the area code for Houston, TX.
    4. NIL(British term meaning "nothing"), VA(Virginia), LA(Louisiana), VANILLA
    5. INEDIBLE, CR(abbreviation for chromium), INCREDIBLE
    6. MONDEGREEN, ON THE GREEN
    Bonus App: "THE NIGHT THE LIGHTS WENT OUT IN GEORGIA"(written by Bobby Russell, sung by Vicki Lawrence, turned down first by Sonny and Cher); The mondegreen in the song is "But your young bride...etc.", which could be heard as "But Joe Young bride...etc.", thereby making Legolambda's ears perk up with good reason.
    Menu
    Earth Studies Hors d'Oeuvre
    GLACIER, LARGE, ICE
    ELEPHANT, ELF, ANT
    (I initially thought this was BEHEMOTH/BEE MOTH all over again. Sorry.)
    Bonus Independence Day Slice
    FIREWORKS, WIRE FORKS(pronounced slightly different after spoonerization)
    Entrees
    1. EVAN KALISH, PAUL H. RAMSEY, "SHEIK", NAVAL
    2. SUVA, FIJI
    3. COLUMBIA(SC), MALIBU(CA)
    4. SANTA FE(NM), SAFE TAN
    5. PHOENIX(AZ), PHONE
    (My original answer was CONCORD(CT), CONDO.)
    6. DENVER(CO), VENDOR
    7. INDIANAPOLIS(IN), NAPOLI(Naples), NAP
    8. TRENTON(NJ), ROTTEN
    9. SALEM(MA), MEALS, MALES
    10. SEINE, NET, (Albert)EINSTEIN, (Philip)GLASS
    Dessert Menu
    Kill The Pain Scratch The Itch
    ANODYNES, YEN, DOAN'S
    BTW Tomorrow is another music trivia night at Tallulah's. This time it's "classic rock". Wish me luck! Also, the lights went out at our house earlier this morning(AL, not GA)! Twice in a row, in terms of our keeping up with the bills lately! Thanks to Alabama Power for understanding, and we'll try not to let it happen again.-pjb

    ReplyDelete
  14. Puzzleria. 7/10//24/ –91 degrees.

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Seagulliver. Eagle, liver, gull,Sea
    Appetizer Menu
    1.
    2.
    3.
    4. Inedible, in(cr)edible–Cr chromium
    5.
    6.”Thats the night the lights went out in Georgia. “ -Your Young bride.”




    Scavenger Hunt Hors d’Oeuvre:
    Glacier, large, ice
    Consequential Slice:
    Bonus slice- Fire works– wire-forks.
    Riffing Off Shortz Slices:
    ENTREE #1 Evan Kalish, Paul Hubert Ramsey
    Entree #2
    Entree- #3,
    Entree#4 , Sun tan.
    ENTREE #8
    ENTREE #9
    Entree #10.
    Doans pills, N-saids-

    Dessert Menu -Doan’s pills. Nsaids - Per Epcot center


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  15. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:
    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Feathered phoenix? Growling griffin?
    Place a body of water in front of the surname of a literary character.
    The first seven letters of this eleven-letter result spell a kind of bird.
    The last five letters spell a body part.
    The second, third, fourth, sixth and tenth letters spell a second bird, one associated with a Greek mythological character... but not in a good way.
    Name these two characters, two birds, and body part.
    Answer:
    Gulliver, Prometheus; seagull, eagle; liver
    SEAGULLIVER=SEAGULL+LIVER; sEAGuLlvEr=EAGLE

    Lego...

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  16. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:
    Appetizer Menu
    Baker’s-Half-Dozen Appetizer:
    Folklore creature, Feat & Feature
    Note: the six puzzles in this week’s Appetizer come courtesy of a very valued and greatly gifted Puzzleria! Contributor.

    Double-Duty Adjective
    1. Take the name of a well-known creature of folklore and an adjective often used for that creature. There are nine letters total in those two words.
    The second letter in the name of the creature and the last letter of the adjective are the same. Change one of those letters to an “h”. Arrange the resulting letters to name a unit of distance to which the adjective could also apply. What are the three words?
    ANSWER:
    Yeti; Large (change an “e” to an “h” and arrange the letters to make); Light-year

    Features physical and “filmy”
    2. Take a term for a body part. Take a general term for a vacation destination.
    Combine those two terms to name a locale of many a physical feat as well as the setting of a cinematic fete and feature. What is the cinematic fete?
    ANSWER:
    "Muscle Beach Party". (1964 Frankie and Annette beach movie) [terms are Muscle and Beach]

    Minnesota Delaware Hawaii Houston
    3. Delaware Hawaii Minnesota is 346.
    So is Houston, Texas.
    Explain it.
    ANSWER:
    The postal abbreviations of those states (DE, HI and MN) appear in consecutive letters on telephone keys: 3 (DEF), 4(GHI), 6(MNO). No other U.S. State postal abbreviations appear in consecutive letters on standard telephone keys. 346 is a Houston, Texas, telephone Area Code.

    Describing “the nondescript.”
    4. Take nothing that looks like something that’s certainly not nothing in college sports at the moment.
    Add the postal code of a U.S. State at the beginning and the postal code of a different U.S. State at the end.
    The result is a word that can describe “the nondescript.” What is it?
    ANSWER:
    VANILLA; Nil (or NIL as an acronym for Name Image Likeness, something of importance in college sports at the moment) [Explanation: NIL + VA, at the beginning + LA, at the end = VANILLA]

    Capistrano Degrees of Difficulty?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VUSC37bLuuU
    5. Take something that’s IMPOSSIBLE to swallow. Insert an element symbolically to get something that’s HARD to swallow. What are they?
    ANSWER:
    Inedible (insert Cr [symbol for Chromium] to get) Incredible.

    “‘Scuse me while I kiss this guy!”
    6. In puzzling, there’s “phonetically,” “sounds like,” and even “sounds somewhat like.”
    Then there’s a word for a lyric heard but neither sung nor spoken.
    Take that word. Remove a letter. The remainder, if spoken aloud, sounds like when a certain person may go or where a certain person called by that same term aims to go as efficiently as possible. What is that common term for such persons?
    ANSWER:
    Driver (of an automobile or on a golf course tee) [Explanation: Mondegreen - m, if spoken aloud sounds like "on the green", when a driver may go or where a driver aims to go]
    Lego...

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  17. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    Bonus Riff to Appetizer #6, by LegoLambda (Joe Young):
    Examples of (as this week’s Appetizers author so eloquently put it) “a lyric heard but neither sung nor spoken” occur in Jimi Hendrix’s “Purple Haze” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGoDaYjdfSg (“‘Scuse me while I kiss this guy!”) and Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Bad Moon Rising” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qrP5IClb6b8 (“There’s a bathroom on the right!”).
    Why do my ears (MY ears, in particular) perk up when I hear a hit-single 1973 Southern Gothic murder ballad this song written by a guy whose wife recorded it?
    What is this song?
    At what exact point in the song do my ears experience this up-perk?
    6. ANSWER: Driver (of an automobile or on a golf course tee)
    [Explanation: Mondegreen (minus the "m") if spoken aloud sounds like "on the green," which is WHEN a driver may go, or WHERE a driver wielding a driver (#1 wood, #2 wood, etc.) aims to go]
    Bonus Riff to Appetizer #6:
    Answer:
    There is an oft-misheard lyric, or "mondegreen," in the song.
    "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K-qK7oVXVRQ
    In the lyric:
    "I'm your best friend and you know that's right/ But your young bride ain't home tonight..."
    "...t your young" sounds like "Joe Young"

    MENU
    Earth Studies Hors d’Oeuvre
    Self-defining geology
    Take a two-syllable noun for any one of many geological masses on the earth’s surface.
    Rearrange the first three plus last two letters of this noun to get a word that describes these masses.
    Rearrange three consecutive interior letters to get a what these masses are made up of.
    What are these three words?
    Answer:
    Glacier; Large; Ice

    Heriotic Slice:
    “One creature great, two small”
    Remove a vowel from a large creature.
    Move the resultant space two places to the right.
    The final result is a small creature preceded by what sounds like another small creature. What are these three creatures?
    Elephant, ant, elf;
    ELEPHANT=>ELPH +ANT=>ELF, ANT

    Bonus Independence Day Slice:
    Pyrotechnics galore and s’mores
    “After we witnessed the _________ display that painted, Pollock-like, the midnight-blue canvas above us, we sat around a bonfire, armed with graham crackers, chocolate bars, and marshmallows that we impaled onto extended ____ _____ before caramelizing them as near the flames as we dared.”
    Spoonerize the syllables of the compound word in the first blank to produce the two word in the second and third blanks.
    What words belong in the three blanks?
    Answer:
    Fireworks; wire forks
    Lego...

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  18. This week's official answers for the record, part 4:

    Riffing Off Shortz And Kalish Slices:
    Beachcombed seashells & bombshells in the breech
    Will Shortz’s June 30th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Evan Kalish of Bayside, New York, reads:
    Name a state capital. Remove its first two letters, and you can rearrange the rest to name something in two words that you might find while beachcombing in that state. What is it?
    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Kalish Slices read:
    ENTREE #1
    Take an adjective and noun, each five letters, that describe a man who during the Korean War commanded the most powerful assemblage of air power ever employed at sea.
    This man’s nickname is the five-letter noun. A word describing the air power is the five-letter adjective.
    Rearrange those ten letters to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.
    Who is this puzzle-maker?
    Who is the man? What is the two-word adjective describing him?
    Answer:
    Evan Kalish; Vice Adm. Paul H. Ramsey; Naval "Sheik";
    Note: Entree #2 is the brainchild of our friend who is the author of this week’s “Baker’s-Half-Dozen Appetizer: Folklore creature, Feat & Feature.”
    ENTREE #2
    Take two capitals in the United States in alphabetical order.
    Add the postal abbreviation of a U.S. state.
    The result is the name of a national capital.
    What is the national capital?"
    Answer:
    SUVA (Fiji)
    [Explanation: The two capitals in the United States in alphabetical order are S & U. Add the postal abbreviation for Virginia (VA) to get SUVA.]
    Note: Entree #3 is the brainchild of our friend Tortitude, whose “Tortie’s Slow But Sure Puzzles appears regularly on Puzzleria!
    ENTREE #3
    Name an inland U.S. state capital within a coastal state. Remove its first two letters.
    You can rearrange the remaining letters to spell a beach city on the opposite coast.
    What is the capital?
    What is the beach city?
    Answer:
    COLUMBIA, MALIBU
    Lego...

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  19. This week's official answers for the record, part 5:
    Note: Entrees #4 through #9 are the brainchildren of our friend Nodd, whose “Nodd ready for prime time” appears regularly on Puzzleria!
    appears regularly on Puzzleria!
    ENTREE #4
    Name a state capital. You can rearrange its letters to name something beachgoers are often trying to get. What is the capital, and what are the beachgoers trying to get?
    Answer:
    SANTA FE; SAFE TAN
    ENTREE #5
    Name a state capital. Remove its last two letters, and you can rearrange the rest to name something most people are likely to have at the beach. What is the capital, and what are people likely to have?
    Answer:
    PHOENIX; PHONE
    ENTREE #6
    Name a state capital. Change its first vowel to a different vowel and rearrange the letters to name someone you might see while at the beach. What is the capital, and who might you see at the beach?
    Answer:
    DENVER; VENDOR
    ENTREE #7
    Name a state capital. Rearrange six of its letters to name a European city that is well-known for its beaches. The first three of those six letters name something some people do at the beach. What are the capital and the European city? What do some people do at the beach?
    Answer:
    INDIANAPOLIS; NAPOLI; NAP
    ENTREE #8
    Name a state capital and remove its last letter.
    Rearrange the rest of its letters to get a word that may describe piers and similar structures you might see at a beach.
    What are the capital and the descriptive word?
    Answer:
    TRENTON; ROTTEN
    ENTREE #9
    Name a state capital.
    Rearrange its letters to name something people typically take with them for a day at the beach.
    Rearrange again to describe many of the people you are likely to see at the beach.
    What is the capital?
    What do people typically take with them?
    What word describes many of the people you are likely to see?
    Answer:
    SALEM; MEALS; MALES
    Lego...

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  20. This week's official answers for the record, part 6:
    ENTREE #10
    Name something, in five letters, that you might see fishers using on a beach, followed by a three-letter synonym of that something. Replace the vowel in the three-letter synonym with a vowel that appears only once in what the fishers on the beach use.
    Rearrange these eight letters to spell the surname of someone you might see on the beach... at least according to a guy whose surname is something you see on the beach that might be good (and filled with refreshment) if it isnot broken, but bad if it is broken.
    What is it that fishers use and its synonym?
    Whom might you see on the beach, according to that guy with the surname... and just who is that guy?
    Hint: The five-letter something fishers use is also the name of a well-known river.
    Answer:
    Seine, net; "(Albert) Einstein (on the Beach)," an opera composed by Philip Glass
    Hint: Seine River in France

    Dessert Menu
    Kill The Pain Scratch The Itch Dessert:
    Analgesic? Anesthetic? “Algiacide?”
    Rearrange the letters in a synonym of “pain killers” to spell a synonym of “itch” and an apostrophized word preceding “Pills” in a brand-name pain-killer. What are these two synonyms and apostrophized word?
    Hint: The letters in the synonym of “itch” appear consecutively within the synonym of “pain killers.”
    Answer:
    Anodynes; Yen, Doan's (Pills)

    Lego!

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