Schpuzzle of the Week:
Experiment (with toy and tool!)
Rearrange the combined ten letters of two creatures from folklore to spell;(1.) a tool, and
(2.) a toy...
that were used in an 18th-century scientific experiment... and,
(3.) what the conductor of the experiment did in order to carry out the experiment (in 3, 4 and 3 letters).
What are these creatures, the tool, toy and what the experiment’s conductor did?
Appetizer Menu
Tough Huffmanian AppetizerIt’s Paradiddle-Riddle-Time!
1.
Think of a nine-letter word for a place away from risk. Remove two letters to name a job concerned with risk.2.
Think of a non-plural six letter word with only one vowel, O (where Y counts as a vowel).
Change the O to a double E to get another word.
3.
MENU
Vowel Shift Hors d’Oeuvre:
Colony becomes a composer
Name a United Kingdom colony. Change a vowel in it to the following vowel in the alphabet.Anagram the result to get a surname of a composer and an informal word for the name of that composer’s nationality.
What are this colony, surname and description?
One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish Slice:
“... Like a fish needs a bicycle!”
Place a space within the first word of a two-word fish, forming three words.
Move the first letter of the third word to the beginning of the first word.
Swap the first letters of the second and third words. Replace a “u” in the third word with an “a” and delete the space between the second and third words.
The result is two modes of transport.
What are these modes of transport and this fish?
Riffing Off Shortz And Young Slices:
“Home, home on the habitat...”
Will Shortz’s March 22nd NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle challenge, created by Joseph Young of St. Cloud, Minnesota, reads:
Name an animal. The first five letters of its name spell a place where you may find it. The last four letters of this animal will name another anaimal — but one that would ordinarily not be found in this place. What animals are these?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Young Slices read:
ENTREE #1Posters of online material and comments tend to hide behind what is known online as a “Screen name,” “Username,” “Handle,” “Display name,” or “Profile name.”
A decade-plus-or-so ago, one particular future puzzle-maker (who was-then-and-still-is-now, alas, also often uncertain of what the heck he is doing!) “grabbed” a two-word “handle” from some ghastly combination of the blogosphere and the vacuummy void within his cranium.
He used this handle to post nonsensical
comments on Blaine’s Blog, and retained it when he signed off on comments he posted on a puzzle blog he launched thanks to invaluable assistance from Word Woman (who had recently launched her own blog, “Partial Ellipsis of the Sun: A Blog for Scientists who like Words and Writers who like Science”
Partial Ellipsis of the Sun: A Blog for Scientists who like Words and Writers who like Science
The “handle” that the “particular future puzzle-maker” picked contains four syllables.
The first syllable is a part of a geometrical figure.
The second syllable is the “fifteenth in a series,”
The third syllable, if you change a vowel, is a part of a tree that is also a general term for the first syllable when it’s a part of a human, rather than geometrical figure.
The fourth syllable is one-half of a past nihilistic and antiesthetic movement in the arts.
What is this “handle?”
(An amusing musing: I hear that “George” is a fine handle... but “Frideric”... Not so much!)
Note: Entrees #2-through-#7 are the brainchildren of our friend and “riffmaster” Nodd, author of his “Nodd ready for prime time,” featured regularly on Puzzleria!...
ENTREE #2
1. Name an animal. The first four letters of its name describe the places where you may find it. The four letters immediately preceding the last letter name other animals you may find in those places.
What animals are these and what word describes the places they be found in?
ENTREE #3
Name an animal. The first five letters of its name, with the fourth and fifth letters reversed, spell the place in which this animal is believed to have originated. The first three letters of the name, plus the next-to-last letter, can be rearranged to name animals that did not originate in that place. What animals are these and where is the first animal thought to have originated?
ENTREE #4
Name an animal. Move the fourth letter of its name seven places earlier in the alphabet. Now rearrange the last six letters, as modified,
to spell where this animal lives.
The first three letters of this animal’s name, in reverse order, name another animal, one that generally does not live in such a place.
What animals are these and where do they live?
ENTREE #5
Take a plural form of the name of an animal. Insert two letters between the second and third
letters.
The result will describe these animals’ living arrangements in their native environment.
What are the animals and how do they live?
ENTREE #6Take the plural form of the name of an animal. Change the first letter to the letter three places
later in the alphabet. Rearrange the result to get an adjective describing these animals and others related to them.
What are the animals and the adjective?
ENTREE #7Name an animal. The first four letters of the name, plus one letter, spell a place where you
may find it.
The last five letters of the name are the first five letters in the name of an animal that would not ordinarily be found in this place.
What animals are these and what is the place?
ENTREE #8Name a two-word seven-letter animal whose first three letters spell a place where you’ll find it, and whose first four letters spell a second animal found in this place.
Three consecutive interior letters of this animal, if reversed, spell something sometimes found on the surface of this place. Its 1st, 3rd, 5th and 4th letters spell something else sometimes found on the surface.
What are this animal and place, second animal, and two things sometimes found the place’s surface?
ENTREE #9
Name an animal. Its first five letters spell a place where you may find it. Its last four letters spell a bird of any kind, including many that would ordinarily not be found in this place.
The final three letters of this animal spell a
chiefly nocturnal bird of prey.
An anagram of the aforementioned “bird of any kind” is a predatory canine creature.
~ Letters #3, 4, 2 & 9 another creature found in the water, a dabbling duck.
~ Letters #6, 9, 4 & 2 spell an insect that feeds on other animals.
~ Letters #5, 2 & 3 spell a rodent.
What are this animal, where you might find it, bird of any kind, bird of prey, canine creature, dabbling duck, insect and rodent?
Extra Credit: ROT-22 the first four letters of the original animal to get an anagram naming many animals’ feet. What is this “ambulatorial” anagram?
Dessert Menu
“Said The Spider To The Fly” Dessert:
“Lustrous” versus “Rusty”
Rounded lustrous body parts associated with a synonym of “parlor” are spelled the same as pointed rusty fasteners associated with a synonym of “bar.”
However, although the rounded lustrous body parts are spelled identically to the pointed rusty fasteners associated with a synonym of “bar,” these synonyms of “parlor” and “bar” are spelled a tad differently.The synonyms would be spelled identically if you doubled an “O” in the shorter synonym.
What are the body parts, fasteners, and two synonyms?
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?
ReplyDeleteHINTS!
ReplyDeleteSUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
Delete2. Oscar and Cornel; Mark Labbett
3. Henry and Eliza sang about the place name.
4. The animal begins with the start of a breakfast spread.
5. The animals rhyme with certain awards.
6. I Wooden know.
7. Huey, Dewey, and Louie’s organization.
Nodd, thanks for the hints. I have Entree #5 now. I had never heard of that animal before.
DeleteYou're welcome, Tortie. They're usually found at high elevations so they wouldn't be commonly seen by most people.
DeletePUZZLE RIFFS!
ReplyDeleteMY PROGRESS SO FAR...
ReplyDeleteIn a great improvement over last week, I seem to have gotten lucky and solved everything except: Conundrum #2, and Nodd's Entrees 2 thru 7, for which I will as always await his hints.
DeleteI will also say that altho I believe I've got the four words necessary for the Dessert, the 'logic' of it rather still eludes me (like several puzzles did last week)....and I'm not sure I've listed the words in the correct order, or seen all the 'connections' properly.
Agreed that this week's puzzles are easier than last week's. I'm only missing the Schpuzzle and Entree #5.
DeleteOf course, as soon as I posted this, I tried something else for the Schpuzzle, and now I have that too. So now I'm just missing Entree #5.
DeleteIF YOU HAVE COMMENTS THAT DO NOT PERTAIN TO ANY OF THE FOUR CATEGORIES ABOVE, YOU MAY WRITE THEM BELOW THIS POST. THANK YOU.
ReplyDeleteKudos to Mathew on the Jumble puzzle. You should send it to the Jumble authors. I'll bet they would be impressed.
ReplyDeleteMathew is indeed an amazingly talented and brilliant young man. I am grateful that our paths crossed.
ReplyDeleteI have finally! posted my "official answers" to last week's blog, at the very bottom of the Comments Section. I am sorry it took so long! But, to be frank, all you brilliant folks solved every one of my puzzles anyway. My answer-posting proved to be superfluous!
ReplyDeleteLegoWhoIsInTheMidstOfADarnSmartPasselOfPuzzleSolvers!
Thank you, Lego, but most of us were stumped by Eco's "Spokane" app! Luckily, Eco posted his answers.
DeleteHappy Friday evening y'all!
ReplyDeleteMom and I are fine. We did not eat out this evening because Bryan and Renae and the girls are going somewhere very out of the way to eat tomorrow night, and Mom says it's a very expensive restaurant...in fact, too, too expensive for us. So we won't be joining them. It's just as well, as I'd rather not have to worry about a thing like that right now. Next week, I have to go back in for another colonoscopy on Tuesday, followed by a visit with my therapist Dr. Bentley on Wednesday. A couple of weeks later I'll have to go back to the dentist to get a crown put on one of my teeth, so there's that, too. Anyway, Mom had to go to the beauty shop earlier this afternoon, and she also had to go to Walgreens to check on a few prescriptions. Walgreens is located right next to McDonald's here in Jasper, but it was a little too early to pick up something for supper then. After she'd returned, I suggested McD for supper, particularly because I wanted to try the Big Arch sandwich, but also because on Monday I'll have to prep for the colonoscopy. This includes a liquid diet the day before, as well as some Miralax and Dulcolax pills. Once the procedure is through Tuesday, I expect to be very hungry, as well as still a little woozy from said procedure. We will be getting something via drive-through both Tuesday and Wednesday. I have also laid out my clothes for both appointments already. BTW The Big Arch is delicious, as is the Oreo McFlurry I had for dessert. Mom also got herself a Filet-O-Fish sandwich and fries. I also had fries and a Diet Dr. Pepper.
I never saw today's puzzles last night, so I've looked them over already tonight. I was pleasantly surprised to see the Jumble mixed in with Mr. Hoffman's other offerings. We already have a Jumble in our local newspaper, so I am definitely proficient at solving it. No big surprise, I easily solved this one first. Also managed to solve the Slice, Entrees #1 and #9, and the Dessert. Though I clearly have more important things on my mind at the moment, I will still check for hints later on.
Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and please pray for me this coming Monday and Tuesday. Cranberry out!
pjbKnowsMondayWillEspeciallyBeAGrind,ButHeWillDoHisBestInPreparationForHisProcedureOnTuesday
Well last night we met my rich Uncle from Portland in Downtown Seattle. We had dinner at his hotel -The Sheraton Grand. I had the seafood chowder -excellent with lots of Clams. My appetizer was a Crudite Burrata with Olive tampenade and Creme Fraiche on sourdough toast points. I had the roasted salmon. Excellent. Dessert was superb -a rhubarb/strawberry tart with Vanilla sorbet on the top. I skipped the wine as I was driving. The rhubarb tart was unforgettable. Most expensive dinner this year so far. It is nice to have a well off uncle. Retired barrister.
DeleteYes sending prayers toward you PJB>. The worst thing about the Colonoscopy is the prep and drinking all the -Whatever it is? Epipac.
DeleteI think I've said this before, but if not -- you can skip the wooziness by declining the sedative. It's commonly done that way in other countries and I've done it twice with no problems at all. You just get up, go home, and get on with your day. 😊
DeleteOops, my comment below was MEANT to be up here, as a part of the colonoscopy prep conversation!
DeleteLooking forward to trying to the Big Arch.
DeleteWhat do you mean by "the Big Arch?" I can't figure it out.
DeleteI just noticed that above you mentioned 'epipac'. Is that what that stuff is actually called? (Or did you possibly mean Ipecac, which is the vomit medication?
The Big Arch is McDonald's latest burger. Almost like the Big Mac, only the bun is kind of different(looks like poppy seeds on it). BTW As I'm typing this, I have already endured the colonoscopy. But the prep for it is truly the worst. I had to eat clear chicken broth for two meals yesterday, and I had to take Dulcolax and Purelax to clear my system completely. On the bright side, we went to Jack's and got breakfast after it was all over. I had a bacon, egg and cheese biscuit, grits and gravy, and I ate every bite. It was great.
DeletepjbDidHateHavingToWaitBeforeTheyFinallyExaminedHim(HeBecameQuiteHangryIndeed!)
PJB, every time you talk about all those fast food/high fat meals you eat, and the (not good for you, either) diet sodas, I fear for your health. I do hope that someone is monitoring your cholesterol and glucose.
DeleteI think you're right. It's a powder you mix in this giant gallon jug they send you.
DeleteDon't know if this will help, but they have TABLETS now that you can use INSTEAD of the disgusting liquid! I was (thankfully) GIVEN a box of them (you take them in two separate batches, with water, altho now I can't remember exactly WHEN), and it was HUGELY easier than that horrid gallon of stuff, which I am unable to swallow and keep down. I don't know how much these tablets would cost if one had to pay for them, however.
ReplyDeleteJoe Young a.k.a. Lego just phoned me and asked that I post a message to everyone here that his computer crashed and he is having it repaired in a shop. Therefore he will NOT be able to post here or on this blog, Puzzleria until he gets his computer returned from the shop with all his puzzle material. He sends his apologies and hopes to be back in operation within 2 weeks, but he cannot say for certain how long it may take. He also asked me say that he cannot send or receive emails until his computer is back home and running.
ReplyDeleteThank you for that info, SDB. How awful for poor Lego! I wish he could have gotten some kind of help such that his computer could have remained at home, i.e. that would have been hopefully faster than two weeks. Indeed, we are ALL "in the soup" if our computers go out on us, and we have no in-house help to repair them! If I had Lego's phone number, I would call and lend my sympathy! If you yourself speak to him again, please send mine to him.
ReplyDeleteYes, SDB, please send my sympathy to Lego as well. I think we all have experienced the frustration that comes with computers and other tech that stops working.
ReplyDeleteLego, here's hoping from all of us here at Puzzleria! that your computer gets fixed sooner and not later. If we don't hear from you again between now and this weekend, I hope you have a Happy Easter!
ReplyDeletepjbIsGladHeOnlyHasAKindleAndAPhoneToContendWithDayInAndDayOut(HisMomHasHadALotMoreProblemsWithHerKindle,Though)
I'm a fan of Chromebooks. They're cheap enough that you can buy two in case one tanks.
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle: KRAKEN, YETI, KEY, KITE, RAN (Ben Franklin’s famous kite experiment)
ReplyDeleteApp:
1. SANCTUARY, ACTUARY
2. PROMPT, PREEMPT
3. NASAL, TRYST, BEACON, ABSORB; SAAB STORY
Hors d’Oeuvre: GIBRALTAR, ELGAR, BRIT
Slice: TRAIN, ROWBOAT, RAINBOW TROUT
Entrees:
1. LEGOLAMBDA (LEG, O, LIMB, DADA)
2. WILDEBEEST, BEES, WILD
3. SPANIEL, APES, SPAIN
4. MARMOSET, RAM, FOREST
5. (Post hint: ) CONIES, COLONIES
6. BRUINS, URSINE
7. WOODCHUCK, CHUCKWALLA, WOODS
8. SEA LION, SEA, SEAL, OIL, SAIL
9. WATERFOWL, WATER, FOWL, OWL, WOLF, TEAL, FLEA, RAT (EC: PAWS)
Dessert: LOCKS, LOCKS, SALON, SALOON
SCHPUZZLE – KRAKEN, YETI; KEY, KITE, RAN (except, according to Google, Franklin did not run, but let the wind take the kite aloft)
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZERS
1. SANCTUARY, ACTUARY
2. PROMPT, PREEMPT
3. NASAL, TRYST, BEACON, ABSORB; SAAB STORY
HORS D’OEUVRE – GIBRALTAR; ELGAR, BRIT
SLICE – TRAIN, ROWBOAT; RAINBOW TROUT
ENTREES
1. LEGLAMBDA
2. WILDEBEEST, BEES; WILD
3. SPANIEL, APES; SPAIN
4. MARMOSET, RAM; FOREST
5. CONIES, COLONIES
6. BRUINS, URSINE
7. WOODCHUCK, CHUCKWALLA; WOODS
8. SEA LION, SEAL, OIL, SAIL
9. WATERFOWL, WATER, FOWL, OWL, WOLF, TEAL, FLEA, RAT, PAWS
DESSERT – NAILS, SALON, SALOON
Oops, it's supposed to be "nails" and not "locks"! Locks really wouldn't be pointy, and I was a bit confused about "rounded" and "rusty." Should have thought more here.
DeleteFor the Schpuzzle, I interpreted "ran" to be that he ran the experiment, but I could be wrong on that.
I hadn't thought of "ran" the experiment. Good observation!
DeleteSCHPUZZLE: KRAKEN & YETI => KEY & KITE & RAN
ReplyDeleteCONUNDRUMS:
1. SANCTUARY => ACTUARY
3. JUMBLE: NASAL => A,S; TRYST => Y,T; BEACON => B,A; ABSORB. => S, O, R; ASYTBASOR => SAAB STORY
HORS D’O => GIBRALTAR minus “A”, plus “E” => ELGAR, BRIT
SLICE: RAIN BOW TROUT => TRAIN => TRAIN, ROWBOAT
ENTREES:
1. LEG-O LAMB-DA. [LIMB, DADA]
2. From the hint: WILD BEAST…which doesn’t exactly pin down which of MANY beasts might be the answer.
7. WOODCHUCK => WOODS; the rest?
8. SEA LION => SEAL, OIL, SAIL
9. WATER FOWL => WATER, FOWL, OWL, WOLF; TEAL , FLEA, RAT ; EX CREDIT: SWPA => PAWS
DESSERT: JOINTS, NAILS, SALON/SALOON
"The Masked Singer" finale just went off a few minutes ago.
ReplyDeleteGALAXY GIRL won the trophy.
She also was revealed to be Ashlee Simpson.
All four judges agreed it had to be her.
Ashlee's husband, Evan Ross, was revealed earlier in the season to be STINGRAY.
It had been said earlier in the series that Ashlee had been "publicly humiliated" when she was "so young".
If I remember correctly, it was sometime in 2004 or 2005 when a much younger Ashlee was musical guest on SNL(with Jude Law as host)and she had lip-synched her performance due to a small bout with acid reflux. She was caught lip-synching her second time on stage when her drummer inadvertently started the first song she "performed" over again, complete with her vocals going without her.
CRANE=NORMANI(4th Place)
CAT WITCH=KYLIE CANTRALL(3rd Place, also "America's Insider")
PUGCASSO=PHILLIP PHILLIPS(Runner-Up)
Our Commander-In-Cheap chose to interrupt the show and talk to the nation shortly after the second hour had begun.
On the Puzzleria! front, Legolambda's computer crashed early Monday evening. Since he did not provide any hints, it may become difficult to show all answers here. I shall try to do my best.-pjb
Schpuzzle
ReplyDeleteKRAKEN & YETI=KEY, KITE, RAN(Benjamin Franklin discovering electricity)
Appetizer Menu
1. SANCTUARY, ACTUARY
2. PROMPT, PREEMPT
3. NASAL, TRYST, BEACON, ABSORB, "SAAB STORY"
Menu
Vowel Shift Hors d'Oeuvre
GIBRALTAR, (Edward)ELGAR, BRIT
One Fish Two fish Red Fish Blue Fish Slice
RAINBOW TROUT, TRAIN, ROWBOAT
Entrees
1. JOSEPH YOUNG, LEGOLAMBDA(LEG, O, LAMB, DADA)
2. WILDEBEEST, WILD, BEES
3. SPANIEL, APES, SPAIN
4. MARMOSET, RAM, FOREST
5. CONIES, COLONIES
6. BRUINS, URSINE
7. WOODCHUCK, CHUCKWALLA, WOODS
8. SEA LION, SEAL, OIL, SAIL
9. WATERFOWL, OWL, WATER, FOWL, WOLF, TEAL, FLEA, RAT, PAWS
"Said The Spider To The Fly" Dessert
NAILS, SALON, SALOON
I also got a new SMART WATCH in the mail today. It doesn't work 100% right now, but hopefully when we go to Bryan and Renae's house for Easter Sunday, someone will fix it for me.-pjb
Sunday Evening (actually early-Monday morning!) Hints... which due to technical difficulties beyond my control have become Late-Wednesday-Evening-Early-Thursdau-Morning Hints!:
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
Experiment (with toy and tool!)
The creatures contain an "outdoor implement" and an alien. The tool is a penner in prison; the toy is a bird
Unbeatable Conundumbeatable Appetizer
Paradiddle-Riddle-Time!
1. Both words end with the same 6 letters in the same order.
2. The six consonants in this puzzle all appear within an 8-letter alphabetical chain.
3. The two word alliterate; the first contains a double-a, the odd letters of the second, in order, spell a crop.
Vowel Shift Hors d’Oeuvre
Colony becomes a composer
The colony is a "rock."
The composer, when "all mixed up," becomes royal...
which, given his homeland, is fitting.
One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish Slice:
“... Like a fish needs a bicycle!”
A gondola carries ores that sparkle like multicolored gems scudding across the wet rainy prismatic heavens.
Riffing Off Shortz And Young Slices:
“Home, home on the habitat...”
ENTREE #1
The “handle” the puzzle-maker” picked contains four syllables:
The first syllable in reverse is a "tress-tamer."
The second syllable, the “fifteenth in a series...” Can't be the World Series, which ends at 7.... nor can it be the Fibonacci series, nor a series of college symposia, nor a Masterpiece Theatre series, nor the plural form of "series"... (Well, I got as far as the fifth series in this series of series, and I feel as if it is futile to go on any further... I am sorry... seriesously!)
The third syllable at least alliterates with the first in this series... (but the ovine alternative answer also would have...
See Nodd's hints for his Apps #2 thru #7 in his March 29, 2026 at 4:25 PM Post.
ENTREE #8
This animal and place, second animal, and two things sometimes found the place’s surface begin with:
SL (3,4 letters), S(3), S(4) O(3) & S(4).
ENTREE #9
These answers begin with:
W (9 letters), W (5), F(4), O(3), W(4), T94), F(4) & R(3)
Extra Credit: P(4)
Dessert Menu
“Said The Spider To The Fly” Dessert:
“Lustrous” versus “Rusty”
The rounded lustrous body parts associated with a synonym of “parlor” and the pointed rusty fasteners associated with a synonym of “bar” are an anagram of SLAIN.
However, he synonyms of “parlor” and “bar” are spelled a tad differently... one harbors a single-O, the other harbors a double-O.
LegoDoubled-O(ver)fromHintingExhaustion!
As You can see, my crashed laptop needed not to be trashed... just patched up By Best Buy's Geek Squad.
ReplyDeleteGratitude to them, but also to skydiveboy who filled you in on why I mysteriously seemed to vanish into the ether... net!
LegoWhoWillNowScrambleToCobbleTogetherSomeKindOfPresentableEditionOfPuzzleria!SometimeLaterOnThursday(HappilyPlantsmith'sGardenOfPuzzleyDelightsIsAlreadyAllReadyToGo!)