Schpuzzle of the Week:
Tracking down a wintry Wiceconsin “where?”
Describe present-day Wisconsin in two words, 17 letters total.
Rearrange the letters to spell three nouns:
❆ A Frozen place in Wisconsin (6 letters),❅ Eight ways to gain entry into this place (5 letters), and
❄ Something you can’t bring inside this place (6 letters).
What is the two-word description of present-day Wisconsin?
What are the three nouns?
Appetizer Menu
Numismatically Monetary Appetizer:
Money Made of Many Miscellaneou$ Metal$
Monetary Manipulation
1. Take a verb for something you can do to money.
Insert a type of money payment. You will get another type of money payment.
What is the verb?
What are the two types of money payment?
“The Sound(s) of Science”
2. What eight-letter word is used in the names of two different concepts in chemistry, but it is pronounced differently in each case?
Anagrammatic Adjectival Hors d’Oeuvre:
The good the bad & the middling
Name a one-syllable adjective that, according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, can mean either excellent, or average, or inferior.
Hint: This adjective is rather “anagrammatic.”
Scrunchy Slice:
“I’ll have a Big Mac... hold the paper, hold the plate!”
Scrunch together two consecutive letters of a paper-holder to spell a plate-holder.The sum of the alphanumeric values of those scrunched letters is the alphanumeric value of the letter that replaces them.
What are this paper-holder and plate-holder?
Riffing Off Shortz And Dickerson Slices:
Casper the friendly Ghost town
Will Shortz’s October 20th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by David Dickerson of Tucson, Arizona, reads:
The city UTICA, NEW YORK, when spelled out, contains 12 letters, all of them different. Think of a well-known U.S. city, that when its name is spelled out, contains 13 letters, all of them different. Your answer doesn’t have to match David/Will’s.
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Dickerson Slices read:
ENTREE #1
The surname of the Republican candidate for president (TRUMP) and the name of his vice-presidential candidate (J.D. VANCE) contain 12 letters, all of them different.
Take:
* The surname of a puzzle-maker (9 letters);
* A portmanteau word, a verb created by an author whose real surname is an anagram of
DOGS NOD; (7 letters);* Maker of a Golf, Polo and Beetle (2 letters);
* a synonym of “babe” that sounds like two letters of the alphabet (2 letters);
* a preposition often seen on book covers (2 letters).
These 22 total letters are all different. No repeats.
Who is this puzzle-maker?
What are the portmanteau word, Maker of a Golf, synonym of “babe,” and preposition?
Entrees #2 through #7 were created by Nodd, whose “Nodd ready for prime time” is featured regularly on Puzzleria!
ENTREE #2Think of a well-known Western U.S. city that,
when its name is spelled out (including the state), contains nine letters, all of them different.
What city is it?
ENTREE #3
Think of a Western U.S. city that, when its name is spelled out (including the state), contains 11 letters, all of them different. The name of the city is also the name of an unincorporated area in an adjoining state that, when its name is spelled out (including the state), contains 16 letters, all of them different. What are the city and the unincorporated area?
ENTREE #4Think of four towns in an Eastern U.S. state. In each town’s name, the letters are all different.
None of the towns’ names has any letters in common with the name of the state.
What are the four towns?
ENTREE #5
A four-letter town in a Western U.S. state has no letters in common with the name of the state in which it is located.
What town is it?
ENTREE #6A four-letter town in an Eastern U.S. state has no letters in common with the name of the state in which it is located.
What town is it?
ENTREE #7
A six-letter city in a Western U.S. state has no letters in common with the name of the state in which it is located.
What city is it?
ENTREE #8
Centuries ago, a future Benedictine abbot was born in a very small village, population 236, in the county Worcestershire, England.
Take a four-letter noun for this abbot and a ten-letter noun he might have used to describe this small village. Rearrange these 14 different letters to spell the name of the village.What are the two nouns and the name of this village?
Dessert Menu
Domestic Dessert:
Appliance from the past
Name a two-word domestic appliance invented many years ago.The last four letters of the first word can be rearranged to spell a synonym of the second word.
The first four letters of the first word, if you remove the second letter, spell a second smaller appliance sometimes coupled with the first to provide convection heat.
What are this appliance and the synonym of its second word?
Every Thursday 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.
QUESTIONS?
ReplyDeleteUm, where are the Entrees?
DeleteYeah, where are the Entrees, and why did it take a whole night before the P! menu, such as it is, was finally up and running?!
Deletepjb,DeeplyConcernedInJasper
NO Dessert either. I am concerned that things are okay with Lego. ?
DeleteMe, too. I hope it's just a computer problem.
Delete💗 We're thinking of Lego and wish all the wonderful to our beloved friend Joe.
DeleteSorry all. There was a death in my very very good friend's family. It was a sister of hers who was just a very kind and giving person. Those two sisters were very close. The funeral home visitation was on Friday, and the funeral service is today.
DeleteThanks to all for your concern.
Joe
Sorry for your loss Lego.
DeleteThinking of you and sending much caring, Joe. We are very sorry for your loss. Our thoughts are with you and your loved ones.
DeleteYes, sorry for your loss, Lego.
Delete🙏
DeleteSorry for your loss, Joe.
DeleteThanks to all for your kind and heartfelt comments and condolences.
DeleteLego...
Sorry for your loss, Joe.
DeletepjbCannotAndWillNotAddAnyKindOfCheesySignoffHere
HINTS:
ReplyDeleteI need to clarify that in Entrees 5, 6, and 7, when the name of the city or town and the state in which it is located are spelled out, all of the letters are different. I should have included that information when I submitted the puzzles, as it does reduce the number of possible answers.
DeleteThe Dessert came to me in a flash, reminding me of one of my "uncertain" Schpuzzle answers.
DeleteSUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
Delete2. Replace the third letter with two “G”s and rearrange to spell a drink that is often consumed at Christmastime.
3. The city is a kind of tobacco and a homophone of a word meaning big and strong.
4. One town is named after a city in the U.K. Another has the same name as a country but was not named after it. The third town was named for a Roman statesman and general. The fourth town has the same name as a foreign capital city but is pronounced differently.
5. Add an “L” to the town name and rearrange to spell a bone that is often seen on flags, at least in the movies.
6. The town is a resort destination and a brand of peppermint candy.
7. The county in which the city is located has the same name as one of Brad’s wives.
Early Monday Hints:
DeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
The Frozen place in Wisconsin is also the name of a "Toy... Truck."
Eight ways to gain entry into this place = a guy named Bill.
Something you can’t bring inside this place: (Do they make exceptions for baby formula?)
Numismatically Monetary Appetizer:
See Bobby's excellent hints, below, in his "Bobby October 27, 2024 at 10:55 AM" Post.
Anagrammatic Adjectival Hors d’Oeuvre:
Three of the anagrams begin with A, N and M.
Scrunchy Slice:
A scrunched L and I resemble a bit-less-curvy U.
Riffing Off Shortz And Dickerson Slices:
Casper the friendly Ghost town
ENTREE #1
The portmanteau word begins with a ___ named Sal, and ends with "55" on a highway sign.
See Nodd's fine hints for his Entrees #2 through #7 in his post, above: Nodd October 27, 2024 at 7:50 PM.
ENTREE #8
The four-letter noun for this abbot is the first two-thirds of a Simeon.
The ten-letter noun he might have used to describe this small village would have been preceded by the word "my."
Domestic Dessert:
Appliance from the past
The second word of the two-word domestic appliance invented many years ago is an anagram of things that shall soon be counted.
LegoCountingOnHisCrossedFingers
Thank you for the hints. I had some alts for the Entrees that I had to move around.
DeleteTwo questions:
1. I have an answer for E3; however, the last letter of the second state name is repeated in the state name. (I also have an alt for two states that don't border each other - 11 and 12 letters respectively).
2. Does the person in E8 actually exist? None of my searches yielded results that fit the puzzle, and I noticed the puzzle doesn't ask for the name of this mysterious person.
Tortie,
DeleteIn Nodd's E#3, consider the 11 letters in the city and first state and the 16 letters of the unincorporated area and second state as separate entities. Within each "entity," there is no repetition of letters. When you compare the 11 letters with the 16 letters, there are 10 letters that repeat!
Regarding my E#8:
It is a total fiction! There may be such a Benedictine abbot who was born in a very small village, population 236, in the county Worcestershire, England...
But the odds are against it!
The four-letter noun for this abbot is "a person preoccupied with arcane details or procedures in a specialized field" (but with its first letter inverted). And the ten-letter noun he might have used to describe this small village is a compound word consisting a pair of five-letter words beginning with a "b" and a "p".
LegoBelievesThatWhenYouDon'tHaveTheColdHardFactsOnYourSideYouMustResortToWarmSoftFiction!
Lego, thanks. I don't think I have the right answer for E3 then. My first entity works, but the second has a repeated letter.
DeleteI already had the answer to E8 but I was curious to see if there was a real person attached. I suspected there wasn't!
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteTortie, as Lego notes, Entree 3 does not say that the two states have no letters in common with each other, only that neither has any letters in common with the name of the city/unincorporated area. In fact, the states have three letters in common.
DeleteNodd, thanks for the further clarification. I understood the instructions perfectly well - it's the solution I'm having trouble with!
DeleteMy first city/unincorporated area and state combo works 100% and fits the "big and strong"/tobacco hint.
My second city/unincorporated area and state combo adds up to 16 letters and is in a bordering state. None of the letters in the city/unincorporated area name are in the state name. However, my answer has a repeated letter in the state name itself (like how "Ohio" has two "O"s).
Tortie, here's another hint: One of the adjoining states has twice as many letters as the other, and the total number of letters in the two states is a multiple of five.
DeleteNot getting the village name in #8, but I do have both words that are supposed to be rearranged together. Solved the Dessert. That much I know so far.
DeletepjbAlsoHasTheChristmasDrinkIn#2,ButThat'sAllFolks!
Almost forgot I got #6 as well! Mentioning the candy really helped.
DeletepjbGotTheSensationWithThatOne!
PUZZLE RIFFS!
ReplyDeleteMY PROGRESS SO FAR...
ReplyDeleteI think I may have the Schpuzzle; a fairly obvious two-word, 17-letter phrase occurred to me right away, and the first noun tumbled out nicely from that. The other two seem a bit dicey to me, however.
DeleteFrankly, I don't mind a slow rollout; I tend to get overwhelmed by mass quantities of information. But I do hope everything's all right with Lego.
I also have an answer for the slice that I'm a bit hesitant about.
DeleteI have answers for the eight puzzles that aren't mine.
DeleteI, too, Paul get easily overwhelmed by too much info all at once, it's just that I don't ever remember only HALF of P! being published at a time.
DeleteI see no actual comments from Lego, so I would still like to know that he is fine.
Yes, hopefully Lego is OK! And lately I've also been overwhelmed too easily with all of the puzzles, and haven't really attempted to solve them all in one sitting or even a day.
DeleteI am on Puzzleria!
ReplyDelete💗🍀🌞 So happy to see your puzzles, Son! Puzzleria is Funtastic!
DeleteAlways enjoy Bobby's puzzles.
Delete😀 It is a joy to know you, Plantsmith, and we enjoy your puzzles also!
DeleteDitto! Bobby's puzzles are always a joy !
DeleteLegoA"PuzzleFunFan!"
Good evening all from all down here in Jasper!
ReplyDeleteMom and I are fine. We just got back from Jim 'n' Nick's earlier this evening. I had the BBQ chicken sandwich, baked beans, mac 'n' cheese, and Coke Zero with refill. Mom had BBQ, mac 'n' cheese, some pickles, coleslaw, and a Sprite. Bryan had bone-out BBQ chicken, a couple of sides, and a lemonade. Mia Kate had the loaded mac 'n' cheese(topped with BBQ pork)and a Coke. Interesting bit of news coming from Mia Kate tonight: She now has a job! She'll be working at a home decor shop near the Warehouse 319 restaurant here downtown, doing odd jobs and cleaning up the place, things like that. Also, she hates the working out she's had to do along with the choreography for our next production of "The Nutcracker" next month. Some kind of "stamina exercises" they've started doing. Something about doing an exercise a few times, then do it another 41 times, that sort of thing.
As for this week's puzzles, I sure am glad to know there were Entrees and a Dessert forthcoming, as I'm sure others here are also glad about it. So far nothing in any of these has jumped out at me as an easy solve. I guess it'll just be Lego and Bobby providing hints this time around. I'm sure they'll be very helpful.
Good luck in solving to all, and please be safe, and of course, hello to Eileen. We're all proud of your son and his puzzling ability. Cranberry out!
pjbHopesMiaKateDoesAGreatJobAtTheHomeDecorShopStartingMonday
pjb, I will also be providing hints, as usual.
DeleteThank you, Cranberry! We are thankful to know you and wish all the wonderful to you and your family.
DeletePlease avoid Mcdonalds for the time being. Me back in the land of "Jack in the Box."
DeleteHints:
ReplyDelete1. Remove all but one of the letters of the name of the shorter money payment within the name of the longer money payment, and you will get another verb for something you can do to money.
2. Hi! Oooo...
Thanks for the hints, Bobby! I've now solved your two Apps, and somehow, my brain came back to life a bit so that I was also finally able to solve the Schpuzzle as well.
Delete1. Remove "ti" from "stipend" to get "spend".
Delete2. The formula for periodic acid is HIO4.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteAnswers:
ReplyDelete1. Send, tip->stipend
2. Periodic (Periodic Table of Elements, Periodic acid)
SCHPUZZLE – BATTLEGROUND STATE; TUNDRA (LAMBEAU FIELD); GATES; BOTTLE
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZERS
1. SEND; TIP, STIPEND
2. COMPOUND
HORS D’OEUVRE – MEAN AMEN NAME MANE
SLICE – CLIPBOARD; CUPBOARD
ENTREES
1. DICKERSON; GALUMPH; VW; QT; BY
2. OGDEN, UTAH
3. BURLEY, IDAHO; BURLEY, WASHINGTON
4. BATH, CUBA, FABIUS, LIMA, NEW YORK
5. LUSK, WYOMING
6. YORK, MAINE
7. LUFKIN, TEXAS
8. MONK; BIRTHPLACE; BRICKLEHAMPTON
DESSERT – FRANKLIN STOVE; KILN
Schpuzzle: BATTLEGROUND STATE; TUNDRA (Lambeau Field), GATES, BOTTLE
ReplyDeleteApp:
1. SEND; TIP, STIPEND
2. PERIODIC
Hors d’Oeuvre: MEAN
Slice: CLIPBOARD, CUPBOARD
Entrees:
1. DICKERSON; GALUMPH, VW, QT (cutie), BY
2. OGDEN, UTAH
3. ???? Best I could do was BURLEY, IDAHO & BURLEY, WASHINGTON - but N is repeated (alt: MILFORD, UTAH & MILFORD, TEXAS)
4. BATH, CUBA, UTICA, LIMA (NEW YORK) (alt: BIG FLATS)
5. LUSK, WYOMING (alt: OREM, UTAH)
6. YORK, MAINE (alt: TROY, MAINE)
7. LUFKIN, TEXAS (alt: BOLING, TEXAS)
8. BIRTHPLACE, MONK, BRICKLEHAMPTON
Dessert: FRANKLIN STOVE, KILN
Yeah, you're right, as usual, Tortie. I somehow managed to overlook the two N's in Washington. I must have been half asleep when I wrote that puzzle. I'm tempted to send all my puzzles to you before submitting them, given the number of times you've corrected my mistakes!
DeleteSo I guess the upshot is, there is no answer for E#3. Apologies to all.
No worries. Well, it works if you just take off the last letter.
DeleteI should've just used Burley, Idaho for that Entree and left it at that. I hope the mistake did not cause you to waste too much time trying to find an answer that didn't exist.
DeleteI didn't know a FRANKLIN STOVE could be equipped with a FAN, but apparently so. Not sure it's really suitable for firing pottery, either. Anyway, a flash of inspiration was the key to my solving.
ReplyDeleteAnd Franklin's key was inside a BOTTLE, but I didn't know you couldn't bring a bottle into Wisconsin (well, I suppose if it contains "white lightning"...). Nor did I know anything about Wisconsin's GATES; but I know it's presently a BATTLEGROUND STATE, and I figured it probably has its share of TUNDRA.
I suppose one might place a plate atop a CUP to keep the contents warm. CLIP > CUP
Oh, now I get it ... the football venue ... duh!
DeleteAnd the addition of BOARD makes a lot more sense ... duh, again!
If it makes you feel any better, I initially thought of CLIP and CUP, but eventually figured out the BOARD addition.
DeleteI didn't even figure out the Wisconsin puzzle until Sunday afternoon. I thought that the phrase had something to do with cold, although I did think of SWING STATE and PURPLE STATE. Totally forgot that it's also called a BATTLEGROUND STATE, until I asked Google about another term for SWING STATE. Also did some Google/Wikipedia research to find out what FROZEN TUNDRA in Wisconsin is and info about its gates.
Schpuzzle
ReplyDeleteBATTLEGROUND STATE, TUNDRA(Lambeau Field), GATES, BOTTLE
Appetizer Menu
1. SEND, TIP, STIPEND
2. PERIODIC
Anagrammatic Adjectival Hors d'Oeuvre
MEAN(name, mane, amen)
Scrunchy Slice
CLIPBOARD, CUPBOARD
Entrees
1. (David)DICKERSON, GALUMPH("Jabberwocky", by Lewis Carroll, or Charles Lutwidge Dodgson), VW(Volkswagen), QT(cutie), BY
2. OGDEN, UTAH
3. BURLEY, IDAHO
4. BATH, CUBA, UTICA, LIMA(NEW YORK)
5. LUSK, WYOMING
6. YORK, MAINE
7. LUFKIN, TEXAS
8. MONK(WONK), BIRTHPLACE, BRICKLEHAMPTON
Domestic Dessert
FRANKLIN STOVE, KILN
"Masked Singer" called on account of World Series.-pjb
This week's official answers for the record, part 1
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
A Wintry Wiceconsin “Where?”
Describe present-day Wisconsin in two words containing 17 letters total.
Rearrange the letters to spell three nouns:
* A Frozen place in Wisconsin (6 letters),
* Eight ways to gain entry into this place (5 letters), and
* Something you can’t bring inside this place (6 letters).
What is the two-word description of present-day Wisconsin?
What are the three nouns?
Answer:
"Battleground State"; Tundra, Gates, Bottle
("Frozen TUNDRA" is a nickname for Green Bay's Lambeau Field (where the Packers play), which has eight entry GATES but forbids all "carry-in" food and drink, including all BOTTLEs.)
Appetizer Menu
Numismatically Monetary Appetizer:
Money Made of Many Miscellaneous Metals
Monetary Manipulation
1. Take a verb for something you can do to money. SEND
Insert a type of money payment. TIP
You will get another type of money payment. STIPEND
What is the verb?
What are the two types of money payment?
Answer:
Send, tip, stipend; (S+TIP+END)
“The Sounds of Science”
2. What eight-letter word is used in the names of two different concepts in chemistry, but it is pronounced differently in each case?
Answer:
Periodic (which is pronounced one way in "PERIODIC Table of Elements," and another way in "PERIODIC Acid":
PERIODIC Table of Elements:or
PERIODIC acid:
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 2
ReplyDeleteMENU
Anagrammatic Adjectival Hors d’Oeuvre:
The good the bad & the middling
Name a one-syllable adjective that can mean either excellent, or average, or inferior.
Hint: This adjective is rather richly "anagrammatic."
Answer:
MEAN
Hint: NAME, MANE and AMEN are anagrams of MAIN.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/mean
Scrunchy Slice:
“Big Mac, please... hold the plate, hold the paper!”
Scrunch together two consecutive letters of a paper-holder to spell a plate-holder.
The sum of the alphanumeric values of those scrunched letters is the alphanumeric value of the letter that replaces them.
What are this paper-holder and plate-holder?
Answer:
cLIpboard; cUpboard
Cupboard:
~ a closet with shelves where dishes, utensils, or food is kept CUPBOARD kitchen closet
Clipboard:
~ a small writing board with a clip at the top for holding papers CLIPBOARD
~ a section of computer memory that temporarily stores data (such as text or a graphics image) especially to facilitate its movement or duplication
Riffing Off Shortz And Dickerson Slices:
Casper the friendly Ghost town
Will Shortz’s October 20th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by David Dickerson of Tucson, Arizona, reads:
The city UTICA, NEW YORK, when spelled out, contains 12 letters, all of them different. Think of a well-known U.S. city, that when its name is spelled out, contains 13 letters, all of them different. Your answer doesn’t have to match David/Will’s.
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Dickerson Slices read:
ENTREE #1
The surname of the Republican candidate for prez (TRUMP) and the name of his vice-prez (J.D. VANCE) contain 12 letters, all of them different.
Take:
* The surname of a puzzle-maker (9 letters);
* A portmanteau word, a verb created by an author whose real surname is an anagram of DOGS NOD; (7 letters);
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hmnHIBIQJg8
* Maker of a Golf, Polo and Beetle (2 letters);
* a synonym of “babe” that sounds like two letters of the alphabet (2 letters);
* a preposition often seen on book covers (2 letters).
These 22 total letters are all different. No repeats.
Who is this puzzle-maker?
What are the portmanteau word, Maker of a Golf, synonym of “babe,” and preposition?
Answer:
(David) Dickerson; galumph; VW (Volkswagen); "cutie" (QT); by:
A B C D E G H I K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y (no F J X or Z)
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 3
ReplyDeleteEntrees #2 through #7 were created by Nodd, whose “Nodd ready for prime time” is featured regularly on Puzzleria!
ENTREE #2
Think of a well-known Western U.S. city that, when its name is spelled out (including the state), contains nine letters, all of them different. What city is it? (Hint: The city name is also the last name of a “Kiwi writer,” and also the middle name by an even more famous U.S. writer who did not use his first name.)
Answer:
OGDEN, UTAH
Hint: (Jenni) Ogden; (Frederic) Ogden (Nash)
ENTREE #3
Think of a Western U.S. city that, when its name is spelled out (including the state), contains 11 letters, all of them different. The name of the city is also the name of an unincorporated area in an adjoining state that, when its name is spelled out (including the state), contains 16 letters, all of them different. What are the city and the unincorporated area? (Hint: The unincorporated area was originally established as a cooperative socialist colony.)
Answer:
BURLEY, IDAHO; BURLEY, WASHINGTON
ENTREE #4
Think of four towns in an Eastern U.S. state. In each town’s name, the letters are all different. None of the towns’ names has any letters in common with the name of the state. What are the four towns? (Hints: One town is named after a city in the U.K. Another has the same name as a country but was not named after it. The third town was named for a Roman statesman and general. The fourth town has the same name as a foreign capital city but is pronounced differently.)
Answer:
BATH, CUBA, FABIUS, LIMA, NEW YORK
ENTREE #5
A four-letter town in a Western U.S. state has no letters in common with the name of the state in which it is located. What town is it? (Hint: The town is the largest municipality in the least populated county in the state.)
Answer:
LUSK, WYOMING
ENTREE #6
A four-letter town in an Eastern U.S. state has no letters in common with the name of the state in which it is located. What town is it? (Hint: The town is a resort destination.)
Answer:
YORK, MAINE
ENTREE #7
A six-letter city in a Western U.S. state has no letters in common with the name of the state in which it is located. What city is it? (Hint: The city is located in a county that has the same name as the first name of a famous U.S. actress.)
Answer:
LUFKIN, TEXAS
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 4
ReplyDeleteENTREE #8
Centuries ago, a future Benedictine abbot was born in a very small village, population 236, in the county Worcestershire, England.
Take a four-letter noun for this abbot and a ten-letter noun he might have used to describe this small village. Rearrange these 14 different letters to spell the name of the village.
What are the two nouns and the name of this village?
Answer:
monk, birthplace; Bricklehampton;
Dessert Menu
Domestic Dessert:
Appliance from the past
Name a two-word domestic appliance invented many years ago.
The last four letters of the first word can be rearranged to spell a synonym of the second word.
The first four letters of the first word, if you remove the second letter, spell a second smaller appliance sometimes coupled with the first to provide convection heat.
What are this appliance and the synonym of its second word?
Answer:
Franklin Stove, Kiln;
(FRAN + BURN +
Lumber + fan = BURN + FLAME)
Lego!
As per my comments above, the official answer to Entree 3 should just be Burley, Idaho due to my error.
DeleteOn Entree 4, Utica meets the puzzle criteria but I didn't include it because it was used in the prompt for the NPR Puzzle I was riffing on. So the official answer is Fabius.