PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED
Schpuzzle of the Week:
Tank & Kat at the “Cordial Teahouse”
Most hungry patrons of the “Cordial Teahouse” truck stop cordially greet their waitress, Kat, with a 5-word anagram of that 15-letter name.A creative trucker named Tank, however, slyly substitutes a 6-letter synonym in place of the third word in that five-word greeting.
That six-letter synonym, along with the last word in the greeting, can be rearranged to spell an 11-letter appetizer that Kat then serves Tank the Trucker.
What are the 5-word greeting, 6-letter synonym and appetizer?
Appetizer Menu
Posed-By-A-Pal-Of-Puzzleria! Appetizer:
Donning padded pants one pin at a time; Currency of the Century; “Shaggy Belafontone!”Note: These posers are the product of the creative gray matter of a longtime contributor to, and “friend of, Puzzleria!”
Currency of the Century!
1. 💸Take an early 21st Century year, four digits, which is an important milestone in the development of a significant form of currency. Change a number in that year to a letter, and add a space in the year, so that the result appears to name two other forms of currency.
What is the year? What are the two other forms of currency? How was that solution reached?
Donning padded pants, one pin at a time!
2. 🩳Name a football action, defensive in nature, carried out while a team is on offense, but nominally executed by neither the offense nor the defense. Replace a vowel in the name of that action by two other different vowels to name something a team would like to have, particularly in a close game.What is the action, and what would a team like to have?
“Shaggy Belafontone!”
3. 🐶Take the first two words of a sporting event that took place mostly in the first 48 hours of January 2026.Remove five consecutive internal letters and a
punctuation mark.
What remains, when read aloud, sounds like a signature lyric from a still popular traditional folk song recorded for release 70 years ago.
What is the sporting event and the lyric?
MENU
Confounding Compound Hors d’Oeuvre:
A “Fall Night” foreshadows looming winter
Name a compound word associated with a certain time of day.
Switch the two syllables and add a space to get two words associated with a sport. What are these three words?
“Oh Barbarian!” Slice:
Appliance? Apple Pliers?
Rearrange the letters in certain kitchen appliances to spell a two-word term
(consisting of a proper name and a plural noun) that describes David, Jay, Jimmy,
Jimmy, Stephen, Seth, Jon and John.
What are these appliances and the two-word term?
Riffing Off Shortz And Schwartz Entrees:
Pie Plates Negate Pilates!
Will Shortz’s February 8th Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Michael Schwartz of Florence, Oregon, reads:
Name something in seven letters that’s designed to help you lose weight. Insert the letters EP somewhere inside this word to get a two-word phrase naming things that are likely to add weight. What words are these?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Schwartz Entrees read:
ENTREE #1
~ A grand (4-letter-word) homer,~ a rookie-phenom-(4-letter-word)-kid, and
~ a (7-letter-word) that is the “cathode” to the pitcher, who is the “anode.”
Rearrange the 15 letters in those three
missing words to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.
What are the three words?
Who is the puzzle-maker?
Note: Entrees #2-through-#7 were composed and contributed by our friend Nodd, author of “Nodd ready for prime time” on Puzzleria!
ENTREE #2
Name something in 8 letters that is designed to help you lose weight.
Replace one letter with the two letters “A” and “N” and rearrange the result to get something that is likely to add weight. What words are these?
ENTREE #3
Name something in 7 letters that some people do to lose weight.
Insert an E somewhere inside this word to getsomething that is likely to add weight.
Then go back to the original word and replace one letter with the letters RO to get something else that is likely to add weight if you eat it a lot.
What words are these?
ENTREE #4Name something in 7 letters that some people do to lose weight. Insert an S somewhere and an L somewhere else to get a kind of eating that is likely to add weight if done often or with rich food. What words are these?
ENTREE #5
Name a two-word phrase that describes products designed to help you lose weight.
Remove the last letter of each word and rearrange the remaining letters to spell a wordfor something you probably should not do too much of if you want to lose weight.
What words are these?
ENTREE #6
Name something in 7 letters that may help you lose weight.
Remove the first letter and double what is now the first letter.
Rearrange, inserting spaces as needed, to get a three-word phrase naming a method of food preparation that is unlikely to help you lose weight.
What words are these?
ENTREE #7
Name something in 9 letters that's designed to help you lose weight.Remove two letters and rearrange to get some
things that are likely to add weight if you make a habit of eating a lot of them.
What words are these?
ENTREE #8
Name a seven-letter word that’s may help you lose excess verbiage. Move the first letter into the third position to spell a new word, one that may help you lose excess avoirdupois. What are these two seven-letter words?
Hint: The first seven-letter word, properly applied, would eliminate all words like “avoirdupois” from your vocabulary and prose!
Dessert Menu
Just Serving Up A Just Dessert:
Service with a Simile: “As you like it” or “Like you like it!”
Those who serve drinks and those who serve time have something in common?
What is it?
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 Thursday.
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.
Note:
ReplyDeleteTo place a comment under this QUESTIONS? subheading (immediately below), or under any of the three subheadings below it (HINTS! PUZZLE RIFFS! and MY PROGRESS SO FAR...), simply left-click on the orange "Reply" to open a dialogue box where you can make a comment. Thank you.
Lego...
QUESTIONS?
ReplyDeleteI think the directions for Entree 8 should say to move the first letter to the third position, rather than moving the third letter to the front. If not, I have the wrong answer.
DeleteThanks to Nodd, I believe Entree #8 is now kosher.
DeleteLegrateful
HINTS!
ReplyDeleteSUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
Delete2. An ex-Congress member had one in Alpharetta.
3. OMAD is a modified form of this.
4. Often seen in troubled teenage girls.
5. Marvin Lee Aday, but vegetarian.
6. Matthew Poncelet, without the corpse.
7. See the pic, or use a lens pad.
Sunday Evening Into Monday Morning Hints:
DeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
Tank & Kat at the “Cordial Teahouse”
The 6-letter synonym that Tank substitutes for the for the third word of that five-word greeting is twice as long as the word it replaces. The 11-letter appetizer that Kat then serves him contains an apostrophe.
Appetizer Menu
Posed-By-A-Pal-Of-Puzzleria! Appetizer:
Donning padded pants one pin at a time; Currency of the Century; “Shaggy Belafontone!”
Currency of the Century!
1. 💸
The number changed looks somewhat like the letter to which it is changed.
Donning padded pants, one pin at a time!
2. 🩳
The image in the Appetizer introduction forms a Hint to Appetizer 2.
“Shaggy Belafontone!”
3. 🐶
The five removed letters can be arranged to spell the first initial and surname of a prominent temporary government operative.
Confounding Compound Hors d’Oeuvre:
A “Fall Night” foreshadows looming winter
The compound word associated with a certain time of day occurs when one is no longer "fast" asleep.
Switch the two syllables and add a space to get two words associated with a sport.
An essential piece of equipment necessary for playing the sport, spelled in reverse, is the name of a fictional bruin.
“Oh Barbarian!” Slice:
Appliance? Apple Pliers?
The certain kitchen appliances provide access to edibles.
Letterman, Leno, Fallon, Kimmel, Colbert, Meyers, Stewart and Oliver
Riffing Off Shortz And Schwartz Entrees:
Pie Plates Negate Pilates!
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Schwartz Entrees read:
ENTREE #1
A grand (4-letters) homer, (anagram of some charitable giving)
a rookie-phenom-(4-letters)-kid, and ("Cheez ____")
the (7-letters) is the “cathode” to the pitcher, the “anode.” ("... In the Rye")
Note: Please see Nodd's hints for his ENTREES 2-7 in his February 15, 2026 at 4:02 AM Post, just above, under HINTS!
ENTREE #8
The seven-letter word that’s may help you lose excess avoirdupois begins with a "pippy cube". The word that may help you lose excess verbiage ends with a partner to "dah."
Dessert Menu
Just Serving Up A Just Dessert:
Service with a Simile: “As you like it” or “Like you like it!”
But some who serve drinks carry trays. And some who serve time pass the time in "solitaire confinement" dealing treys, aces and deuces to themselves from a deck!
LegoWhoNotesThat"TheClink"MayNotBe"King'sQuarters"ItIsAtLeastSometimesTheSiteOf"King'sCorners"
Joy of joys, I finally got the Schpuzzle. Actually, I HAD been completely on the right track and had even had the correct 11-letter appetizer, but somehow had not pulled out the right two words that make it up (before), but with this hint now, about the synonym being half the length etc, I was able to work things to the proper conclusion.
DeleteOn to everything else....
Looking at that Dessert hint, I think I have a completely different answer (which as I said before, seemed all too simple...but it has to be a valid alternative.)
DeleteQuestion re the Slice hint (I hadn't even realized there WAS a Slice this week): is there a BRAND NAME involved, or merely a generic term for the kitchen appliance. I have tried everything, and altho I've come up with a funny answer (that is not politically what we here all believe), as well as a kind of 'riff', but NOT a reasonable answer. I don't think any of us needed all those last names, either...we knew who you meant!
DeleteThanks for the hints.
DeleteWhere I'm still stuck: App 1 (not a lot of hope on that one), the Slice (like VT, I already knew who the names are), Entree 5 (know who Marvin Lee Aday was, but not the vegetarian version), and Entree 7 (see where the picture represents/lens pad, but only thing I can get is 7-letter thing related to losing weight).
I also don't think I have the Dessert right based on the latest hint.
VT and Tortie, there is no brand name in the Slice. The appliance is a generic two-word term.
DeleteEntree 5 -- think of what would remain if you removed part of Aday's stage name to make it vegetarian.
Entree 7 -- think of the generic term for the brand name suggested by sled pan/lens pad.
Thanks for the additional hints! I have Entree 5 now. I was applying the previous hint to the wrong part of the puzzle. Looks like I also have the nine-letter word in Entree 7, although I haven't figured out the other part of the puzzle.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteYay, got the Slice! Hint: think of a name that's missing from the list.
DeleteThat just leaves the one part of Entree 7, the probably impossible (for me) App 1, and likely the intended answer for the Dessert.
A Trio of Posed-By-A-Pal-Of-Puzzleria! Appetizer Hints:
DeleteHere are a trio of hints (some that do "double-duty") courtesy of our puzzle-making-Pal-of-Puzzleria!:
Appetizer 1 Hints:
Weight, weight, don't tell . . . well, maybe tell that a fraction of the solution is a fraction.
And the old coxswain said: "Oar, _ _ _ _ _ _ faster or else!"
(Note: In the quotation immediately above, the word "Oar" is followed by two 3-letter words, not one 6-letter word.)
Appetizer 3/2 Hint:
The Appetizer 3 event had eleven of the Appetizer 2 actions.
Appetizer 3/1 Hint:
The Appetizer 3 event had four of what sounds like one form of Appetizer 1 currency.
LegoWishingAll"PaddedPants"PocketsPackedWith"Currency"AndOtherSwagThatIsNot"Shaggy"AtAll!
PUZZLE RIFFS!
ReplyDeleteMY PROGRESS SO FAR...
ReplyDeleteLet's see...I've successfully managed to solve ONLY Entrees 1, 3, 4, 5 and 8 (tho as I've said before, gettiing ANY of Nodd's prior to hints is always a victory)....with a bad alternate (I'm sure) answer for #7.). Plus Dessert, which was the easiest of the bunch.
DeleteI spent probably more than an hour TRYING to work out the Schpuzzle on Thurs evening, but never managed to make a dent (despite an approach that I had thought was pretty clever.)
Also got nowhere on any Appetizer or the Hors D.O. So like pjb always says, am eagerly awaiting the hints.
I think the Schpuzzle and the Hors D.O. are related somehow, but I can't see how Tank and Kat fit in.
DeleteVT, see hints for my Entrees above. For App 2, look up Ray Guy. In App 3, note the shape and color of the vessel as well as the puzzle title. The lyric rhymes with a clinic.
DeleteI've made very little progress this week. My eyes glazed over at the Schpuzzle, and it didn't get better. Can't even get the Dessert.
DeleteI did eventually figure out the Schpuzzle, but didn't feel like looking at anything else.
Nodd, I suspected the right lyric for App 3. But the sporting event query I used yielded nothing of use. I'll look at your hints later today.
OK, got App 3 now. Got confused about the instructions about when it took place and how long the event was. Needless to say, I've never heard of the event before, but I do know a similar one, which I think is very funny.
DeleteAnd maybe I have a valid answer for the Dessert as well. That's it for now!
DeleteIF YOU HAVE COMMENTS THAT DO NOT PERTAIN TO ANY OF THE FOUR CATEGORIES ABOVE, YOU MAY WRITE THEM BELOW THIS POST. THANK YOU.
ReplyDeleteI tried to put this comment in the questions file, but is the focus of the Cordial Teahouse -Northern Italian cuisine like it's sister restaurant in Jersey the "Corlone house?" where I know they have the fried ravioli apps.?
ReplyDeleteGood thought, Plantsmith, but not my intended cuisine. My menu item is a dish that may complement a fine (Eek!) wine.
DeleteLegoWhoNotesThat"TanK"EventuallyEndsUpOrderingADelicacyWeServeUpWeeklyOnPuzzleria!
Lots of nice wines in Northern Italy especially the Barolos. Like the 2019 Carlo Revelli's.
DeleteGood Friday the 13th/Valentine's Day Eve to all here upon this great blog!
ReplyDeleteMom and I are fine. Her sorority sisters chose her to be Queen yesterday afternoon. Even called her "Sweetheart", and gave her candy. She also said whoever did her write-up included her being on dialysis, so that probably clinched the title for her. Earlier this evening, Bryan and Mia Kate took us out to Cracker Barrel. Mia Kate said we'd be going there for sure when she was over here cleaning house for us. She especially wanted to buy something in the store part of the restaurant, and I guess she did. She also has plans to eat lunch with Austin in Cullman tomorrow afternoon(Valentine's date, obviously). At CB I had the two homestyle chicken fillets, bacon mac 'n' cheese, country green beans, a house salad with ranch dressing, and a Coke Zero w/refill.
Mom had chicken tenders, mashed potatoes, carrots, and a Sprite. Bryan had a chicken fried steak and water to drink, and by now I've forgotten what sides he had. Mia Kate had some kind of fish fillets and some kind of strawberry drink, and I've forgotten her sides as well. Afterwards Bryan took us on the scenic route on the way back. I didn't feel carsick as a result, but I lay down to rest for about an hour before checking in here. I've solved the Slice, Entrees #1, #4, and #6, and the Dessert already. Looking forward to any and all hints that will come later in the week.
Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and I hope none of you are superstitious, but will have great plans for Valentine's Day tomorrow. Cranberry out!
pjbHasNoFearOfTheNumber13,NotEvenIfThereWereThatManyEntreesThisWeek(AndThereWeren't,ThankGoodness!)
SCHPUZZLE – “I COULD EAT A HORSE”; DEVOUR; HORS D’OEUVRE
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZERS
1. 2025 [White House cryptocurrency summit]; POUND STERLING [change 2 to £]; QUARTER [$0.25]
2. PUNT, POINT
3. DUKE’S MAYO BOWL, DAY-O
HORS D’OEUVRE – BREAKFAST, FAST BREAK
SLICE – CAN OPENERS, CONAN’S PEERS
ENTREES
1. SLAM, WHIZ, CATCHER; MICHAEL SCHWARTZ
2. CROSSFIT, CROISSANT
3. FASTING, FEASTING, FROSTING
4. PURGING, SPLURGING
5. LOW FAT, LOAF
6. WALKING, A LA KING
7. SUCRALOSE (SPLENDA), COURSES
8. EDITING, DIETING
DESSERT – THEY BOTH SPEND TIME BEHIND BARS
Schpuzzle: I COULD EAT A HORSE, DEVOUR, HORS D’OEUVRE
ReplyDeleteApp:
1. (Post hint: ) Appears the year is probably 2025 (demise of penny), ???, 25 (quarter). First part is ZO??? (Best I could do pre hint was 2011 -> Z, Oil (upper case O, upper case I, lower case l); alt: 2001 or 2011 - end in 1 -> WON; various cryptocurrencies (but probably too obscure))
2. PUNT, POINT
3. DUKE’S MAYO BOWL, DAY-O
Hors d’Oeuvre: BREAKFAST, FAST BREAK
Slice: CAN OPENERS, CONAN PEERS
Entrees:
1. SLAM, WHIZ, CATCHER; MICHAEL SCHWARTZ
2. CROSSFIT, CROISSANT
3. FASTING, FEASTING, FROSTING
4. PURGING, SPLURGING
5. LOW FAT, LOAF (got stuck on this one, because I thought the “loaf” was part of the food product, like veggie loaf or lentil loaf)
6. WALKING, A LA KING
7. SUCRALOSE, ???
8. DIETING, EDITING
Dessert: BOTH CAN BE FOUND BEHIND BARS (likely wrong; doesn’t match hint)
Appetizers:
ReplyDelete1. 2002; A Pound & A Quarter
[2002 (the year in which Euro coins and notes were first used), change final 2 to Z, add a space to get 20 0Z, which looks like 20 Ounces which can be read as a Pound and a Quarter]
2. Punt & Point
[Note the (river) Punt Formations in the introductory image.]
3. Duke's Mayo Bowl & (sounds like) Day-o
Good ones CD.
DeleteSchpuzzle
ReplyDeleteI COULD EAT A HORSE, DEVOUR, HORS D'OEUVRE
Appetizer Menu
1. 2002(the year Euros were first used), changing the last 2 to a Z, making 20 OZ, which looks like 20 ounces, or a pound and a quarter.
2. PUNT, POINT
3. DUKE'S MAYO BOWL, DAY-O(from the "Banana Boat Song")
Menu
Confounding Compound Hors d'Oeuvre
BREAKFAST, FAST BREAK(basketball)
"Oh Barbarian!" Slice
CAN OPENERS, CONAN PEERS
Entrees
1. SLAM+WHIZ+CATCHER=MICHAEL SCHWARTZ
2. CROSSFIT, CROISSANT
3. FASTING, FEASTING, FROSTING
4. PURGING, SPLURGING
5. LOW FAT, LOAF
6. WALKING, A LA KING
7. SUCRALOSE
8. EDITING, DIETING
Just Serving Up A Just Dessert
Both are found BEHIND BARS.
In memory of James Van Der Beek, who passed away recently, FOX decided to rebroadcast the "Real Full Monty" special, which featured him. Therefore, there was no "Masked Singer" episode this evening. Better luck next week.-pjb
Puzzleria 2-18-26” 32 degrees out. Mucho hail
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle:
1.
2. Punt, point
3.
Hors d’Oeuvre:
Entrees
1. Slam,whiz, catcher, Michael Schwartz
2.
3. Fasting, feasting, frosting
8. Dieting, editing
Dessert: Behind bars. cute.
Reply
This week's official answers for the record, part 1
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
Tank & Kat at the “Cordial Teahouse”
Many hungry patrons of the “Cordial Teahouse” truck stop greet their waitress, Kat, with a 5-word anagram of that 2-word,15-letter name.
A trucker named Tank, however, substitutes a 6-letter synonym for the third word of that five-word greeting. That 6-letter synonym, along with the last word in the greeting, can be rearranged to spell an 11-letter appetizer that Kat then serves him.
What are the 5-word greeting, 6-letter synonym and appetizer?
Answer:
"I could eat a horse!"; devour; hors d'oeuvre; (Tank says, "I could DEVOUR a horse!") DEVOUR and HORSE are an anagram of HORS D'OEUVRE
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 2
ReplyDeleteAppetizer Menu
Posed-By-A-Pal-Of-Puzzleria! Appetizer:
Donning padded pants one pin at a time; Currency of the Century; “Shaggy Belafontone!”
Note: These posers are the product of the creative gray matter of a longtime contributor to, and “friend of, Puzzleria!”
Currency of the Century!
1. 💸Take an early 21st Century year, four digits, which is an important milestone in the development of a significant form of currency. Change a number in that year to a letter, and add a space in the year, so that the result appears to name two other forms of currency.
What is the year? What are the two other forms of currency? How was that solution reached?
Answer:
2002 (year in which use of Euro coins and banknotes was launched); change a number and add a space to get 20 0Z (which appears to be an abbreviation of 20 Ounces, which can also be read as a Pound and a Quarter, two other forms of currency.
HINT: The number changed looks somewhat the letter to which it is changed. (2 looks somewhat like Z)
Note: Prior to 2002, the Euro had been used for accounting and electronic payments.
Donning padded pants, one pin at a time!
2. 🩳Name a football action, defensive in nature, carried out while a team is on offense, but nominally executed by neither the offense nor the defense. Replace a vowel in the name of that action by two other different vowels to name something a team would like to have, particularly in a close game.
What is the action, and what would a team like to have?
Answer:
Punt (-u, substituting oi =) Point [Explanation: A punt is carried out while a team is on offense but is executed by Special Teams. It is defensive in nature since it does not advance the ball but moves the opposing offense further from the Goal Line.]
“Shaggy Belafontone!”
3. 🐶Take the first two words of a sporting event that took place mostly in the first 48 hours of January 2026.
Remove five consecutive internal letters and a
punctuation mark.
What remains, when read aloud, sounds like a signature lyric from a still popular traditional folk song recorded for release 70 years ago.
What is the sporting event and the lyric?
Answer:
Duke's Mayo (Bowl) - uke's M = D+ayo, which sounds like the signature lyric from "The Banana Boat Song".
HINT: The five removed letters can be arranged to spell the first initial and surname of a prominent temporary government operative. (ukesM rearranged = E. Musk)
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 3
ReplyDeleteMENU
Confounding Compound Hors d’Oeuvre:
A “Fall Night” foreshadows looming winter
Name a compound word associated with a certain time of day.
Switch the two syllables and add a space to get two words associated with a sport.
What are these three words?
Answer:
Breakfast; fast break (basketball)
“Oh Barbarian!” Slice:
Appliance? Apple Pliers?
Rearrange the letters in certain kitchen appliances to spell a two-word term (consisting of a proper name and a plural noun) that describes David, Jay, Jimmy, Jimmy, Stephen, Seth, Jon and John.
What are these appliances and the two-word term?
ANSWER:
CAN OPENERS; Conan (O'Brien) peers; (David Letterman, Jay Leno, Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert, Seth Meyers, Jon Stewart and John Oliver)
Riffing Off Shortz And Schwartz Entrees:
Pie Plates Negate Pilates!
Will Shortz’s February 8th Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Michael Schwartz of Florence, Oregon, reads:
Name something in seven letters that’s designed to help you lose weight. Insert the letters EP somewhere inside this word to get a two-word phrase naming things that are likely to add weight. What words are these?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Schwartz Entrees read:
ENTREE #1
A grand (4-letters) homer,
a rookie-phenom-(4-letters)-kid, and
the (7-letters) is the “cathode” to the pitcher, the “anode.”
Rearrange those 15 letters to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.
Answer:
Slam; Whiz; Catcher
Michael Schwartz
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 4
ReplyDeleteNOTE: The following six Entrees were composed by "Puzzle-god Nodd."
ENTREE #2
Name something in 8 letters that's designed to help you lose weight. Replace one letter with the letters AN and rearrange the result to get something that is likely to add weight. What words are these?
Answer:
CROSSFIT; CROISSANT
ENTREE #3
Name something in 7 letters that some people do to lose weight. Insert an E somewhere inside this word to get something that is likely to add weight. Then go back to the original word and replace one letter with the letters RO to get something else that is likely to add weight if you eat it a lot. What words are these?
Answer:
FASTING; FEASTING, FROSTING
ENTREE #4
Name something in 7 letters that some people do to lose weight. Insert an S somewhere and an L somewhere else to get a kind of eating that is likely to add weight if done often or with rich food. What words are these?
Answer:
PURGING, SPLURGING
ENTREE #5
Name a two-word phrase that describes products designed to help you lose weight. Remove the last letter of each word and rearrange the remaining letters to spell a word for something you probably should not do too much of if you want to lose weight. What words are these?
Answer:
LOW FAT, LOAF
ENTREE #6
Name something in 7 letters that may help you lose weight. Remove the first letter and double what is now the first letter. Rearrange, inserting spaces as needed, to get a three-word phrase naming a method of food preparation that is unlikely to help you lose weight. What words are these?
Answer:
WALKING; A LA KING
ENTREE #7
Name something in 9 letters that's designed to help you lose weight. Remove two letters and rearrange to get some things that are likely to add weight if you make a habit of eating a lot of them. What words are these?
Answer:
SUCRALOSE (SPLENDA), COURSES
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 5
ReplyDeleteENTREE #8
Name a seven-letter word that’s may help you lose excess avoirdupois. Move the third letter to the beginning of the word to spell a new word, one that may help you lose excess verbiage.
What are these two seven-letter words?
Hint: The second, new seven-letter word, properly applied, would eliminate all words like “avoirdupois” from your vocabulary and prose!
Answer:
Dieting; Editing;
Dessert Menu
Just Serving Up A Just Dessert:
Service with a Simile: “As you like it” or “Like you like it!”
Those who serve drinks and those who serve time have something in common?
What is it?
Answer:
Both are behind bars.
Lego!
OOps, I am way too late. Was out of town today. Oh well.
ReplyDeleteSCHPUZZLE: CORDIAL TEAHOUSE => I COULD EAT A HORSE; DEVOUR + HORSE => HORS D'OEUVRE
APPETIZERS:
1. 2009 [Launch of Bitcoin] => ?
3. TOM DOOLEY? => HANG DOWN? or POOR BOY? [Hint: E MUSK?]
HORS D’O: BASKETBALL (POOH => HOOP) => BREAKFAST => FAST BREAK
SLICE: CAN OPENERS? => CARSON ???? [I wanted some word meaning ‘followers'’ or ’successors’ but could not find one]
ENTREES:
1. MICHAEL SCHWARTZ => SLAM, WHIZ, CATCHER
2. EXERCISE? =>
3. FASTING => FEASTING
4. PURGING => SPLURGING
5. LOW FAT => LOAF
6.
7. EXERCISES => CERISES?
8. EDITING => DIETING
DESSERT: BARS!
A rather funny alternative answer for the Slice, IF one were of a different “persuasion’ than I think all of us HERE on P! actually are, might have been: GARBAGE DISPOSALS => POLARISED GASBAGS
LOL.
DeleteThere's a few of those on Blaine's blog too-or maybe that is what you were referring too.
DeleteI'm not sure if you'll actually see this reply, Plantie, but thanks for laughing! I'm not quite sure what you mean by 'a few of those on Blaine's blog"....you mean, interesting anagrams that skewer that disaster that is this government? I'm not quite sure exactly what you mean by "what you are referring to." Unless you mean my assumption that virtually everyone here in P! is appalled at what is going on in our country.
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