Thursday, November 14, 2024

Chad do-si-does with Victoria? Terms of uncommon distinction; Last names of past thespians; Carpentry tools create creature; “Utah Salt” yields “hula tats”? Pans-Eared Red Snapper

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Terms of uncommon distinction

Take a two-word term that, for an average human male adult, is between five feet and six feet, or thereabouts, above the ground.

The number of letters in the two words differs. The words do, however, share a more uncommon distinction in common.  

What is this two-word term?

What uncommon distinction do these two words share in common?

Appetizer Menu

Skydiversionary Appetizer:

Chad do-si-does with Victoria?

1. Think of the name of a country in two syllables. 

Reverse the order of those two syllables and you will name the capital city of another country. 

What are the country and the city?

Indy Spectator vs. State Patrol officer

2. What is the difference between a fan at the Indy 500 and a state patrol officer observing the interstate highway?

MENU

Stage And Screen Hors d’Oeuvre:

Last names of past thespians

Take a past thespian’s surname. 

Move the first two letters to the end, so that they replace the last letter. 

The result is a second past thespian’s surname. 

Who are these thespians?

Woodworking Wordplay Slice:

Carpentry tools create creature

Name two woodworking tools that share a similar function. They also share identical letter-pairs (like SAW and AWL share an AW, for example). 

Remove one of the letter-pairs and rearrange the result to spell an animal. (For example, if you remove one of the “AW” letter-pairs from “SAW” and “AWL,” the letters that remain are “SAWL,” which can be rearranged to spell not an animal but the words “SLAW” or “LAWS.”)

What are these tools and animal?

Riffing Off Shortz And Baggish Slices:

Pans-Eared Red Snapper

Will Shortz’s November 10th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Steve Baggish of Arlington, Massachusetts, reads:

Using only the letters of PANDERS, and repeating them as often as desired, spell a certain entrée at a seafood restaurant (3-6 3 7).

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Baggish Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Using only the letters in a nine-letter word that means “the making or adapting of something
to suit a particular purpose,” spell the hometown of a prolific puzzler-maker. 
What is this nine-letter word? What is the hometown and who is the puzzle-maker?

Note: Entree #2 was created by our friend Plantsmith, whose “Garden of Puzzley Delights” regularly vivifies Puzzleria!s pages.

ENTREE #2

Using only the letters in the word PANDERS, describe some unusual performers in two words of seven letters each.

Note: Entrees #3 though #8 were penned by our friend Nodd, whose “Nodd ready for prime time” regularly graces Puzzleria!s pages.

ENTREE #3

Think of a two-word dish featured at seafood restaurants. 

The first word, and the second half of the second word, in order, spell another seafood dish. The first half of the second word is an ingredient in a non-seafood dish often featured at upscale restaurants. 

What are the two seafood dishes and the non-seafood ingredient?

ENTREE #4

Think of a two-word dish featured at seafood restaurants. Rearrange its letters to spell something most people enjoy when dining out, and something most people don’t enjoy seeing when dining out.

ENTREE #5

Think of a seafood dish that is available in two main varieties. 

The last three letters of this dish, read backward and followed by the first four letters in order, spell a two-word phrase that describes one variety of the dish. 

What are the dish, the two-word phrase, and the variety of the dish that the two-word phrase describes?

ENTREE #6

Think of a two-word dish featured at seafood restaurants. 

The last five letters of the first word, in order, are the first five letters of the second word. 

The last four letters of the second word, in
order, spell what patrons of restaurants do after they arrive. 

What is the seafood dish, and what do patrons do?

ENTREE #7

Think of a dish featured at seafood restaurants. The name of the dish comes from a European language. 

Rearrange the letters of the dish to spell another seafood dish and a musical term associated with the same European country. What are the two seafood dishes and the musical term?

ENTREE #8

Think of a two-word dish featured at seafood restaurants. Remove a personal pronoun. 

Rearrange the rest of the letters to spell a one-word seafood dish and something that would be left after eating either dish. 

What are the two dishes and what would be left after eating them?  

ENTREE #9

Using only the letters of WINDSTORM, and repeating them as often as desired, spell what is on display (in words of 5, 5, 6 and 3 letters) in the previous six Entrees, #3 through #8.

What are these words? 

ENTREE #10

Using only the letters of POLYCENTRISM – using some once,  and repeating others over and over as often as necessary – spell a headline (in words of 5, 4, 7 and 6 letters) 
 that might have appeared in the Rolling Stone or Crawdaddy magazine in late 1968 or early 1969.

What is this headline? 

Hint: “...over and over...”

ENTREE #11

Using only the letters of ARTICLE, and repeating them as often as desired, spell a beverage and a dessert that customers might
order off a menu or list that prices items separately, in words of 6, 6, 1, 2 and 5 letters.

What are these menu items and the kind of menu that prices items separately?

ENTREE #12

Using only the letters of DROUGHTS, and repeating them as often as desired, spell:

* a two-word term (in 4 and 4 letters) for periods of the day when the most people commute to and from work, causing heavy traffic congestion on roads and public transportation;

* a slang term for large, heavy motorcycles, especially Harley Davidsons (4 letters); and

* a term for automobiles rebuilt or modified for high speed and fast acceleration (3 and 4 letters).

What are these three terms?

ENTREE #13

Using only the letters of UMPIRES, and repeating them as often as desired, spell three mathematical terms in 3, 5 and 5 letters.

What are these three terms?

ENTREE #14

Take a seven-letter synonym of “sickness” or “malady.” 

Using only those seven letters, and repeating them as often as desired, spell: 

* synonyms of “consume”(3 letters) and “consumed”(3 letters); 

* a synonym of  “breakfast,” “lunch” or “supper”(4); 

* a “hot drink”(3), a “cold drink”(4), an “alcoholic drink”(3); 

* a “candy”(4), a “fruit”(4);

* a word for “pot roast, steak, hamburger or turkey”(4); and

* a  “kind of bean”(4).

What is this seven-letter synonym of “sickness” or “malady?”

What are the ten other words?

Dessert Menu

Lake & State Dessert:

“Utah Salt” yields “hula tats”?

A well-known three-word phrase contains two names. 

Anagram this phrase to spell a name of a lake and a state that lake is in. 

What are this phrase, lake and state?

Hint: Take two names associated with the three-word phrase. One is an anagram of an empire. The other is an anagram of an island.

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.

61 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. SUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 3-8:
      3. Or you could drink the second word.
      4. The first word anagrams to something you can use to make a bed more comfortable.
      5. The seafood one uses to prepare the dish anagrams to a word meaning sedate.
      6. The second word is a nut case.
      7. The dish, minus the first letter, anagrams to a tropical ailment.
      8. The one-word seafood dish is something birds do. The word for what would be left after eating, minus the last letter, is a code.

      Delete
    2. Late Sunday Hints:

      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      Is there lye in the levee?

      Skydiversionary Appetizer:
      Skydiveboy prefers that his puzzles "stand on their own," without hints. We respect his judgment.

      Stage And Screen Hors d’Oeuvre:
      "Grumpy Heather!"

      Woodworking Wordplay Slice:
      "Smoothing tools"

      Riffing Off Shortz And Baggish Slices:
      ENTREE #1
      "Tinker, ______, Soldier, Spy"
      ENTREE #2
      "Shoe-gazing hip-hoppers?" (The two-word answer begins with a D and R.)
      See Nodd's excellent hints for his Appetizers #3 through#8, above.
      ENTREE #9
      "...kind of a thumbs-up to Nodd"
      ENTREE #10
      A Shondell writes red-letter rhymes!
      ENTREE #11
      The "menu or list that prices items that customers can order separately" is a French term. So is the dessert. The beverage is a wine rooted in Anglo-French.
      ENTREE #12
      HO__, HO_ RO__, RU__ HO__
      ENTREE #13
      Elementary arithmetic; "2 is the sole even number in this category; a term from geometry
      ENTREE #14
      The seven-letter synonym of “sickness” or “malady” begins with a homonym of the A in IPA.

      Lake & State Dessert:
      The lake lies in more than one state. Brushing up on your "Genesis" might prove fruitful.

      LegoWhoNotesThatSethAlasDidNotMakeThe"DessertCut"

      Delete
    3. A2.Probably an alternate -but the words speedsters and speeders seem to lend themselves to some kind of wordplay.

      Delete
    4. E2. One of my favorite jazz singers is Nora Jones. She has been "cruelly" in my opinion, referred to as Snorah Jones. Not sure why. I still adore her.

      Delete
    5. There is an awesome sea food restaurant in Seattle- Salty's on Alki -and if you peruse the menu -i think there may be some relevant items. I have been there-just a couple of times-but Spuds is more in my budget.

      Delete
    6. E2-- and maybe Nirvana-but I am not sure. "Here I am now- entertain me."

      Delete
    7. Thanks for the hints. I solved around half of the puzzles on Thursday night and then just never got back to the puzzles. Hope to make more progress post-hint.

      Delete
    8. Not getting anything with these hints that I didn't already know before. Please try again.
      pjbIsBeginningToThinkMaybe[SDB]HasTheRightIdea

      Delete
    9. Early Tuesday Hints:
      Schpuzzle: Terms of uncommon distinction:
      One of the two words is a body part; the other, if you delete the first letter, is a the first name of a past daredevil.

      Stage And Screen Hors d’Oeuvre:
      The thespians are an actor and actress from the past. The actress has an alliterative name. The actor's first name begins with "one of two" parts that an anagram of a "CABIN RAT" creature has.

      Woodworking Wordplay Slice:
      If you do not remove one of the letter-pairs from the two tools, you can rearrange the letters to spell a kneecap and a barnyard creature.

      Riffing Off Shortz And Baggish Slices:
      Pans-Eared Red Snapper
      ENTREE #1
      The "nine-letter word" begins with an "end," has a conjunction in the middle (fittingly), and (overlappingly with the conjunction) ends with "a sporting venue with turnbuckles."
      ENTREE #2
      The first seven-letter word is an anagram of "pop" and a part of "pop's" neck.
      The second seven-letter word sounds like something that encloses candy.
      ENTREE #3
      Your designated driver ought not order the second word in the dish.
      ENTREE #4
      The first word in the two-word dish sounds like a slo-pitch-league pitcher.
      ENTREE #5
      Anagramming the surname of an American sports media personality (who gives his followers the "sports dish") should give you the dish you might order at a restaurant.
      ENTREE #6
      The last four letters of the first word in the featured two-word dish are four consecutive letters of the alphabet... nearly in the correct order!
      ENTREE #7
      A former Ram defensive lineman's first name (whose surname sounds like a French weekday) lurks within this featured food.
      ENTREE #8
      After you remove the personal pronoun from the two-word dish, its first word is vowelless. But that's okay... the second word still has an equal number of consonants and vowels.
      ENTREE #9
      The first five-letter word in the answer is "Nodd's." the other three words all begin with a W.
      ENTREE #10
      The first word in the headline is the first name of a Shondell.
      The second word is inky writing implements.
      The third word is a color associated with Harvard.
      The fourth word is "parts of a libretto."
      ENTREE #11
      The beverage is an anagram of "cartel"; the dessert ends with a wild critter's den.
      ENTREE #13
      One word is the beginning of a season;
      Another defines the letter-counts of the three words in the answer;
      The third word is faceted.
      Dessert Menu
      Lake & State Dessert:
      The lake is situated west of the Mississippi... indeed quite a bit west.

      LegoHopingTheseEarlyTuesdayHintsHelp

      Delete
    10. pjb, you're not the only one struggling with this week's puzzles!

      Lego, thanks for the additional hints. Here's what I'm currently missing (besides App 2):
      I'm pretty sure I have the first word of Entree 4, but not the second. Closest I could get was "something a restaurant kitchen might have" + "something you don't want to see in the restaurant."
      I have four words for Entree 9, but they make no sense grammatically.
      The Dessert has been a real stumper. I'll start of by saying that I know who the phrase is about (even pre-hint). After that, I am stuck. I'm not even sure if both of the names are part of the phrase, there are two different names, or no names are part of the phrase. Second, I think I may be on the right track for the lake, but I can't quite come up with anything that anagrams into a three word phrase that fits the first part.

      Delete
    11. Tortie,

      The second word in Entree 4 comes from French cuisine. Think of a food with a smooth velvety texture.

      In the Dessert, the lake name is a kind of alcoholic drink. Its letters can also be arranged to spell a kind of cheese, a past tense verb, or an informal term for a woman.

      Delete
    12. Is rafting permitted on the lake in question?

      Delete
    13. I'm doing pretty good with the "using all the letters in the word" puzzles at the end of the Entrees. Got #9, #10, #11, #12, #13, and #14, but I'm missing some words in #10 and #13. The others are still too tricky.
      pjbBelievesBetterLateThanNever(InTermsOfSolving)

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

      Delete
    15. Paul, yes, if you are in the NRA.

      Delete

      Delete
    16. Nodd, thanks for the additional hints. I have the Dessert now. I was working on the wrong two names and had the wrong lake as well.

      Still working on Entree 4. I think it's one of two dishes, but neither one seems to be yielding anything that fits the puzzle.

      Delete
    17. OK, I think I may have Entree 4 now, although I'm unsure.

      Delete
    18. Tortie, the seciond word of the answer to Entree 4 is one syllable, six letters. The dish is eaten with a spoon. The word sounds like the first syllable of a two-syllable, seven-letter word for something you might eat along with the dish. If your answer matches these criteria, I would say it is correct.

      Delete
    19. OK, yes, that does match what I have. Thanks!

      Delete
  2. Replies
    1. Think of a six letter word for a person that might wound someone. Think of another one. Rearrange those twelve letters to get a connection between the two thespians of the Hors d’Oeuvre.

      Delete
    2. Didn't somebody here once post the CELINE DION/FELINE/LION puzzle? Shawn Kennedy submitted it to GAMES/World of Puzzles Magazine, in the latest issue!
      pjbBelievesIt's[LETITBE/TIE/BELT]AllOverAgain

      Delete
    3. Maybe it was here, but it was definitely an NPR puzzle. It was before my time solving these puzzles, but it was brought up on Blaine's blog when the E-I-E-I-O puzzle came out.

      Delete
  3. Replies
    1. I got the pronunciation lesson.

      Delete
    2. Huh! I was SURE sdb was trying to teach us how to pronounce Cuba. I like the answer everybody else has better, but I still think CUBA/BAKU works as an alternative (unless I'm pronouncing BAKU wrong).
      Have I been pronouncing the name of the bean wrong all these years? I don't even want to think about that city in Ohio.

      Delete
  4. Happy Friday evening to all!
    Sorry if I'd almost forgot to check in here, but we've got "The Nutcracker" this weekend, and due to Mia Kate's dress rehearsal, we didn't eat out tonight. But Mom did go to Hardee's to get us supper. I had the Frisco Burger, fries, Diet Dr. Pepper, and a cinnamon raisin biscuit. Mom had chicken fingers, fries, Sprite, and a cinnamon raisin biscuit. She wanted the biscuit especially, and we had coupons, so we got Hardee's. As for my progress with the latest conundrums, I got SDB's first Appetizer right off, couldn't figure out the anagram for Steve Baggish's hometown, got part of #11, all of #12, and all of #14. That's it. Will need hints for all others(except SDB's, obviously).
    Good luck in solving, and please stay safe, and here's hoping the production of "The Nutcracker" will go perfectly Saturday night and Sunday afternoon. Cranberry out!
    pjbGettingOneOfTwoFrom[SDB]IsBetterThanNothing,Really

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hope the play goes well. E1. If someone in the cast, went to such a play's dress rehearsal with an I'll fitting tunic they might need some--------?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. An "I'll" fitting tunic? Does that mean I will be fitting in the thing eventually?
      pjbWouldLikeToPlay"NameThatTunic",IfCalledUponToDoSo

      Delete
  6. It's brass monkeys out there today. 36 degrees this AM.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hey Miss Laura-any smoke in your vicinity? My son in Manhattan- East Harlem has seen some.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No smoke directly, but I have heard that there's fire/smoke on the NY/NJ border. We are in a drought warning, however.

      Delete
  8. I survived Helene and now have survived my first Bomb Cyclone though we lost power last night.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What in heck IS a 'bomb cyclone?' I think I saw some news blurb earlier today about a 'bomb' weather event up in WA.

      Delete
    2. Not really sure, but something about a large drop in atmospheric pressure like 25 millibars, creates a power differential that can spark a storm. It has a different power source from a hurricane-though similar somehow? As you can see, i really don't know. Lots of new terms here - like atmospheric river which is really just a lot of rain? I spent most of the afternoon yesterday picking up limbs in our yard- mostly Fir and Birch as a result of the bomb cyclone. Hope that clears it up. LOL

      Delete
    3. Two deaths and still thousands without power and yesterday all the gas stations were non functional as were most street lights. I hope our beach cabin made it -but have not heard yet.

      Delete
  9. The capital of Azerbaijan is not Bacue.

    It looks like Humphrey Bogart and Greta Garbo never worked together on a picture, but, according to The Oracle of Bacon, Frank Reicher was in The Great O'Malley with Bogart and Camille with Garbo. Anagram FRANK REICHER to get ARCHER and KNIFER, two people who might wound someone.

    "Adam and Eve on a raft" is "diner lingo" for two eggs on toast.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ab2o_Ca69CQ&t=36s

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Think I heard that on occasion at Waffle House.

      Delete
  10. Too many post-hints to mention!
    Schpuzzle: EYE LEVEL; BOTH WORDS ARE PALINDROMES
    App:
    1. MALI, LIMA
    2. ???? ONE IS WATCHING CARS GO ABOVE THE SPEED LIMIT LEGALLY; THE OTHER IS WATCHING CARS GO ABOVE THE SPEED LIMIT ILLEGALLY
    Hors d’Oeuvre: HUMPHREY BOGART, GRETA GARBO
    Slice: PLANE, LATHE, ELEPHANT
    Entrees:
    1. TAILORING; ARLINGTON, STEVE BAGGISH
    2. DEADPAN RAPPERS
    3. SHRIMP COCKTAIL, SHRIMP TAIL (COQ AU VIN)
    4. LOBSTER BISQUE, QUIET, SLOBBERS (Best I could do was pre-hint was lobster tail -> toaster, bill, but toaster makes no sense)
    5. CLAM CHOWDER, RED CLAM, MANHATTAN
    6. SALMON ALMONDINE
    7. CALAMARI, CLAM, ARIA
    8. SHRIMP CREOLE (-I), PERCH, MORSEL
    9. NODD’S WORDS WISDOM WOW ???? (WIN, WIT, WON, WOO)
    10. TOMMY PENS CRIMSON LYRICS
    11. CLARET, ECLAIR, AL A CARTE
    12. RUSH HOUR, HOGS, HOT RODS
    13. SUM, PRIME, PRISM
    14. AILMENT; EAT, ATE, MEAL, TEA, MALT, ALE, MINT, LIME, MEAT, LIMA
    Dessert: ADAM AND EVE, MEAD, NEVADA (kept trying phrases related to Cain and Abel, and thought it was Lake Tahoe)

    ReplyDelete
  11. SCHPUZZLE – EYE LEVEL; THEY ARE PALINDROMES
    APPETIZERS
    1. MALI; LIMA
    2. ?
    HORS D’OEUVRE – BOGART; GARBO
    SLICE – PLANE, LATHE; ELEPHANT
    ENTREES
    1. TAILORING; ARLINGTON; STEVE BAGGISH
    2. DEADPAN RAPPERS
    3. SHRIMP COCKTAIL; SHRIMP TAIL; COCK.
    4. LOBSTER BISQUE; QUIET; SLOBBERS
    5. CHOWDER; RED CHOW; MANHATTAN CLAM CHOWDER
    6. SALMON ALMONDINE; DINE
    7. CALAMARI; CLAM; ARIA
    8. SHRIMP CREOLE; PERCH; MORSEL
    9. “NODD’S DROSS DROWNS WIT”
    10. TOMMY PENS “CRIMSON” LYRICS
    11. CLARET, ECLAIR A LA CARTE
    12. RUSH HOUR; HOGS; HOT RODS
    13. SUM; PRIME; UPPER
    14. AILMENT; EAT; ATE; MEAL; TEA; MALT; ALE; MINT; LIME; MEAT; LIMA
    DESSERT – ADAM AND EVE; MEAD, NEVADA

    ReplyDelete
  12. 11/20/24” Puzzleria- windy. Up yo74 mph in Enumclaw
    Schpuzzle:
    Eye level

    Woodworking Wordplay Slice:
    Sander, plane -Salanander

    Riffing Off Shortz And Baggish Slices:
    Pans-Eared Red Snapper
    A1- Mali, Lima
    A2. One watches speedsters and one catches speeders.

    ENTREE #1
    Tailoring, Arlington
    ENTREE #2
    Deadpan rappers
    ENTREE #3
    Shrimp cocktail, lobster tail
    ENTREE #4
    ENTREE #5
    Clam chowder red chow,manhattan clam chowder
    ENTREE #6
    Salmon almondine, more familiar with sole almondine
    ENTREE #7
    ENTREE #8
    ENTREE #10
    Poly centrism, crimson, pens, polly, lyric
    .Tommy
    ENTREE #11Article; Claret, ala carte, eclair
    ENTREE #14
    Ailment, meal, ale,tea,

    ReplyDelete
  13. I had an utter computer disaster late last week; on Friday, after having Apple Support tell me that something on my computer was corrupted (the background turned bright yellow, which apparently was the sign), the entire O.S. had to be re-installed.

    Due to the first Apple support rep NOT having double checked that my supposedly working External hard drive WAS configured to work on a Mac (so the last four years, nothing was EVER ever actually being backed up), when the re-install occurred, despite what I had been promised by Apple Support, all my files were GONE...pictures, tax records, receipts, icons on the desktop of which there were dozens and dozens....I am grief stricken and beyond the ability to cope.

    And things are STILL not okay with the computer back-up; I had an engineering friend here on Sunday afternoon, he got me signed into icloud, so at least SOMETHING is now doing some backup, but we found out that the external HD Is STILL not functioning when we tried to back up a test photo I got online. Some Apple internal program called Time Machine said that it couldn't do any backing up because there are MORE THAN ONE "HD-Data" files, and indeed, the friend and I then found FOUR such files in Disk Utility (or whatever it's called.).

    At that point, he felt it was too dangerous to try to eliminate any of them, lest some contained actual Operating System data. So I am forced to call Apple Support back. Having already spent HOURS on the phone with four different such reps on Friday (after a middle of the night Apple 'chat' as well) I have been too worn out and distraught to call them back for a few more days yet.

    At least, the computer is operational, whereas before, Chrome had simply quit working almost completely, due to whatever this corruption was. I could just scream.

    Clearly, I had no time or ability to tackle the puzzles this week. The only three I got were:

    APPETIZERS:

    1. MALI = >. LIMA

    HORS D’O: BOGART => GARBO

    ENTREES:

    1. TAILORING => ARLINGTON; STEVE BAGGISH

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's a shame, VT. Hope you can get back to normal soon.

      Delete
    2. Thank you, Nodd. The situation has reduced me to a pile of quivering terrified jelly!

      Delete
  14. Sounds like a nightmare. And chrome is supposed to be so bulletproof.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Gosh, VT. You do NOT deserve these computer nightmares! Sounds as if the engineering friend who helped you was a welcome "silver lining" at least.

      LegoWhoGivesKudosToViolinTeddyForSolvingThreePuzzlesUnderTryingCircumstances

      Delete
    2. Thank you, Lego. I can use all the sympathy I can get. I suppose it's rather like when you lost all your puzzle information, however many years ago that was, and despite valiant aid, were not ever able to recover it. I have no hope of such aid, of course, my pics and files are gone forever. I am SO MAD at the Apple Support agent who did NOT check the full extent of whether my external hard drive was working...I was far too naive, and unknowing about that aspect of things (and everything else, to be honest.)....Yes, I do feel cursed when it comes to all technology. It constantly fails me!

      Delete
    3. Just saw your comment now, Plantie. Chrome is hardly bulletproof. Prior to this recent nightmare, it had been malfunctioning FOR YEARS, but not as nearly 100% of the time as just before I contacted Apple Support (which I hadn't even realied existed FOR FREe, thank goodness, until the wee hours of Friday morning, when I discovered their 'chat' function.).

      Even now, AFTER all this reinstall, etc, I am STILL getting "the rainbow spinning wheel of death" which has once or twice reached the "Chrome is not responding" dreaded sentence in the "Force Quit Applications" window, which I always keep OPEN now, so I can see how bad the stalling is going to be....i.e. if it wil lfix itself fairly quickly, or if it's going to be a prolonged. hang-up.

      My older son had told me a couple of months ago, that HE gave up on Chrome and switched to Firefox...this due to Chrome not liking Ad Blocker, which extension I find UTTERLY NECESSARY.

      But sometimes, like just AFTER the new install, for several days past here, Chrome worked nearly perfectly, and I had been so relieved. Sadly, it appears thatI am STILL going to have problems with it. I am just NOT brave enough to try to download/install/switch everything over to a brand new browser; I do NOT do well with things that LOOK DIFFERENT from what I am used !! (That always applied to MUSIC in the orchestra, as well...for instance, if the stand partner's music was YELLOWER than the pages of my own, copy of the music, it threw me off terribly.)

      Delete
  15. Schpuzzle
    EYE LEVEL, BOTH WORDS ARE PALINDROMES.
    Appetizer Menu
    1. MALI, LIMA(Peru)
    2. One watches speedsters, the other catches speeders.
    Stage And Screen Hors d'Oeuvre
    (Humphrey)BOGART, (Greta)GARBO
    Woodworking Wordplay Slice
    PLANE, LATHE, ELEPHANT
    Entrees
    1. TAILORING, ARLINGTON(MA)
    2. DEADPAN RAPPERS
    3. SHRIMP COCKTAIL, SHRIMP TAIL, COCK
    4. LOBSTER BISQUE, QUIET, SLOBBERS
    5. CLAM CHOWDER, RED CHOW, MANHATTAN CLAM CHOWDER
    6. SALMON ALMONDINE, DINE
    7. CALAMARI, CLAM, ARIA
    8. SHRIMP CREOLE, PERCH, MORSEL
    9. NODD'S WORDS, WISDOM, and WIT
    10. TOMMY PENS "CRIMSON" LYRICS
    11. CLARET, ECLAIR A LA CARTE
    12. RUSH HOUR, HOGS, HOT RODS
    13. SUM, PRIME, PRISM
    14. AILMENT, EAT, ATE, MEAL, TEA, MALT, ALE, MINT, LIME, MEAT, LIMA
    Lake &State Dessert
    ADAM AND EVE, MEAD, NEVADA
    Masked Singer Results:
    ICE KING=DRAKE BELL(Nickelodeon veteran, neither Mom nor I know him that well)
    Next week they will have a Thanksgiving special involving the Peanuts Thanksgiving special, Thursday night at 7pm.
    Stay tuned next for my latest cryptic crossword here on P!-pjb

    ReplyDelete
  16. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:
    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Terms of uncommon distinction
    Take a two-word term that, for an average human male adult, is between five feet and six feet, or thereabouts, above the ground.
    The number of letters in the two words differs. The words do, however, share a more uncommon distinction in common.
    What is this two-word term?
    What uncommon distinction do these two words share?
    Answer:
    Eye level (the level that is as high as a person's eyes); Both EYE and LEVEL are palindromic
    Hint:
    Is there LYE in the LEVEE?
    (LYE and LEVEE can be rearranged to spell EYE LEVEL)

    Appetizer Menu
    https://www.google.com/search?q=renault+daufin+country+horn+city+horn+commercial&oq=renault+daufin+country+horn+city+horn+commercial&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIJCAEQIRgKGKABMgkIAhAhGAoYoAEyCQgDECEYChigAdIBCTIwMTA3ajBqN6gCALACAA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:141b0300,vid:OCkgf8mM714,st:0
    Skydiversionary Appetizer:
    Chad do-si-does with Victoria?
    1. Think of the name of a country in two syllables.
    Reverse the order of those two syllables and you will name the capital city of another country.
    What are the country and the city?
    Indy Spectator vs. State Patrol officer
    2. What is the difference between a spectator at the Indy 500 where you are competing and a state patrol officer observing the interstate highway where you are driving?
    Answers:
    1. Mali, Lima (capital city of Peru)
    2. One will WATCH you, and the other will CLOCK you.
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  17. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:
    MENU
    Stage And Screen Hors d’Oeuvre:
    Last names of past thespians
    Take a past thespian’s surname.
    Move the first two letters to the end, replacing the last letter.
    The result is a second past thespian’s surname.
    Who are these thespians?
    Answer:
    Humphrey Bogart; Greta Garbo

    Woodworking Wordplay Slice:
    Carpentry tools create creature
    Name two woodworking tools that share a similar function.
    They also share identical letter-pairs (like SAW and AWL share an AW, for example).
    Remove one of the letter-pairs and rearrange the result to spell an animal. (For example, if you remove one of the “AW” letter-pairs from “SAW” and “AWL,” the letters that remain are “SAWL,” which can be rearranged to spell not an animal but the words “SLAW” or “LAWS.”)
    What are these tools and animal?
    Answer:
    Plane, Lathe; Elephant

    Riffing Off Shortz And Baggish Slices:
    Pans-Eared Red Snapper
    Will Shortz’s November 10th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Steve Baggish of Arlington, Massachusetts, reads:
    Using only the letters of PANDERS, and repeating them as often as desired, spell a certain entrée at a seafood restaurant (3-6 3 7).
    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Baggish Slices read:
    ENTREE #1
    Using only the letters in a nine-letter word that means “the making or adapting of something to suit a particular purpose,” spell the hometown of a prolific puzzler-maker.
    What is this nine-letter word?
    What is the hometown and who is the puzzle-maker?
    Answer:
    TAILORING; ARLINGTON (Massachusetts); Steve Baggish
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  18. MENUThis week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    Note: Entree #2 was created by our friend Plantsmith, whose “Garden of Puzzley Delights” regularly vivifies Puzzleria!s pages.
    ENTREE #2
    Using only the letters in the word Panders, describe some unusual performers in two words of seven letters each.
    Answer:
    "Deadpan rappers."
    Note: Entrees #3 though #8 were penned by our friend Nodd, whose “Nodd ready for prime time” regularly graces Puzzleria!s pages.
    ENTREE #3
    Think of a two-word dish featured at seafood restaurants. The first word, and the second half of the second word, in order, spell another seafood dish. The first half of the second word is an ingredient in a non-seafood dish often featured at upscale restaurants. What are the two seafood dishes and the non-seafood ingredient?
    Answer:
    SHRIMP COCKTAIL; SHRIMP TAIL; COCK.
    ENTREE #4
    Think of a two-word dish featured at seafood restaurants. Rearrange its letters to spell something most people enjoy when dining out, and something most people don’t enjoy seeing when dining out.
    Answer:
    LOBSTER BISQUE; QUIET; SLOBBERS
    ENTREE #5
    Think of a seafood dish that is available in two main varieties. The last three letters of this dish, read backward and followed by the first four letters in order, spell a two-word phrase that describes one variety of the dish. What are the dish, the two-word phrase, and the variety of the dish that the two-word phrase describes?
    Answer:
    CHOWDER; RED CHOW; MANHATTAN CLAM CHOWDER
    ENTREE #6
    Think of a two-word dish featured at seafood restaurants. The last five letters of the first word, in order, are the first five letters of the second word. The last four letters of the second word, in order, spell what patrons of restaurants do after they arrive. What is the seafood dish, and what do patrons do?
    Answer:
    SALMON ALMONDINE; DINE
    ENTREE #7
    Think of a dish featured at seafood restaurants. The name of the dish comes from a European language. Rearrange the letters of the dish to spell another seafood dish and a musical term associated with the same European country. What are the two seafood dishes and the musical term?
    Answer:
    CALAMARI; CLAM; ARIA
    ENTREE #8
    Think of a two-word dish featured at seafood restaurants. Remove a personal pronoun. Rearrange the rest of the letters to spell a one-word seafood dish and something that would be left after eating either dish. What are the two dishes and what would be left after eating them? (Hint: You can also rearrange eight letters of the two-word dish to spell an informal term for what would be used in eating either dish.)
    Answer:
    SHRIMP CREOLE; PERCH; MORSEL (HINT: CHOMPERS)
    ENTREE #9
    Using only the letters of WINDSTORM, and repeating them as often as desired, spell what is on display (in words of 5, 5, 6 and 3 letters) in the previous six Entrees, #3 through #8.
    What are these words?
    Answer:
    NODD'S WORDS, WISDOM, WIT
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  19. This week's official answers for the record, part 4:
    ENTREE #10
    Using only the letters of POLYCENTRISM – using some once, and repeating others over and over as often as necessary – spell a headline (in words of 5, 4, 7 and 6 letters) that might have appeared in the Rolling Stone or Crawdaddy magazine in late 1968 or early 1969.
    What is this headline?
    Answer:
    "Tommy Pens 'Crimson...' Lyrics" (Tommy James, along with Peter Lucia Jr., the drummer in the Shondells rock group, wrote the lyrics to the hit song "Crimson and Clover" in late-1968)
    Hint: “...over and over...”
    Hint: “...over and over...” are lyrics of "Crimson and Clover"
    ENTREE #11
    Using only the letters of ARTICLE, and repeating them as often as desired, spell a beverage and a dessert that customers might order off a menu or list that prices items separately, in words of 6, 6, 1, 2 and 5 letters.
    What are these menu items and the kind of menu that prices items separately?
    Answer:
    ECLAIR, CLARET; A LA CARTE
    ENTREE #12
    Using only the letters of DROUGHTS, and repeating them as often as desired, spell:
    * a two-word term(in 4 and 4 letters) for periods of the day when the most people commute to and from work, causing heavy traffic congestion on roads and public transportation;
    * a slang term for large, heavy motorcycles, especially Harley Davidsons (4 letters); and
    * a term for automobiles rebuilt or modified for high speed and fast acceleration (3 and 4 letters).
    What are these three terms?
    Answer:
    HOGS, HOT RODS, RUSH HOUR
    ENTREE #13
    Using only the letters of UMPIRES, and repeating them as often as desired, spell three mathematical terms in 3, 5 and 5 letters.
    What are these three terms?
    Answers:
    SUM, PRIME, PRISM
    ENTREE #14
    Take a seven-letter synonym of “sickness” or “malady.”
    Using only those seven letters, and repeating them as often as desired, spell:
    * synonyms of “consume”(3 letters) and “consumed”(3 letters);
    * a synonym of “breakfast,” “lunch” or “supper”(4);
    * a “hot drink”(3), a “cold drink”(4), an “alcoholic drink”(3);
    * a “candy”(4), a “fruit”(4);
    * a word for “pot roast, steak, hamburger or turkey”(4); and
    * a “kind of bean”(4).
    What is this seven-letter synonym of “sickness” or “malady?”
    What are the ten other words?
    Answer: AILMENT; EAT, ATE, MEAL, TEA, MALT, ALE, MINT, LIME, MEAT, LIMA (bean)

    Dessert Menu
    Lake & State Dessert:
    “Salt Lake” yields “hula tats”?
    A well-known three-word phrase contains two names.
    Anagram this phrase to spell a name of a lake and a state that lake is in.
    What are this phrase, lake and state?
    Hint: Two names associated with the three-word phrase are anagrams of an empire and an island.
    Answer:
    Adam and Eve; (Lake) Mead, Nevada (Lake Mead sits in Nevada and Arizona.)
    Hint: Cain and Abel, two of Adam and Eve's sons, are anagrams of Inca, an empire, and Elba, an island.

    Lego!

    ReplyDelete
  20. NOTE:
    The answer to my #2 appetizer puzzle/joke/riddle is:
    One will WATCH you, and the other will CLOCK you.
    Since I do not think anyone here solved it, it might be interesting to some how I came up with it. It was simple. I for some unknown reason just happened to notice that WATCH and CLOCK are almost the same things. They both tell time, but one is too large to wear, and the other is always worn one way or another. However, while they are both essentially the same, these two words may be used in different ways that are not interchangeable. That caused me to coin the riddle. I suspected it might be difficult to solve. I hope you enjoyed it, just the same.

    ReplyDelete