PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED
Schpuzzle Of The Week
Civic, Duty, Artistic Beauty:
Name instructions, in two words, that voters may be given at the polls on election day – either orally or in written form.Anagram the combined letters of these two words to name a famous artist.
Who is this artist?
What are the two words for those instructions?
Appetizer Menu:
Ten Not-So-Easy Word-Teasy ViolinTeddy-Tailored Appetizers:
Find the seventeen words in the puzzles below:
ONE-WORD SOLUTIONS
Find one-word solutions to:
1. One-word: average vs preside2. One word: null vs sick
3. One word: jump vs safe
4. One word: Overeat vs fissure
TWO-WORD SOLUTIONS
Find two-word solutions to:
5. Two words: A race vs a greeting[The second letters, both consonants, differ]
6. Two words: Moistening vs annoyance
[The fifth letters, both consonants, differ]
7. Two words: A type of candle vs a snouty mammal
[The fourth letters, both vowels, differ]
8. Two words: Native of a South Pacific Island vs first name of a female model[The first letters (both consonants) are adjacent in the alphabet (no letters between them); the fourth letters (also both consonants) are five spots apart in the alphabet (four letters between them)]
9. Two words: Take a word for ‘meeting’; remove the first three letters to get a word for ‘balm’.
THREE-WORD SOLUTION
Find a three-word solution to:
10. Three words: What you might do to stay in shape vs what happens when you let it (or anything) go to pot vs pass or expire.
[Add one vowel to the end of first word to get a second word]
[Add one vowel to the beginning of second word to get a third word]
MENU
Clean Sheets But Dirty Sheep Hors d’Oeuvre:
SlumberJacks-and-LumberJills
Remove consecutive interior letters from something in the bedroom that facilitates slumber.
The removed letters spell a word associated with pain, and therefore contrary to slumber.
What remains, however, are two words for something (in two words) conducive to sleep and pain relief that “log-sawing slumberers” may keep handy by their bedsides.
What are this slumber-facilitator, painful word, and the thing conducive to pain relief and sleep?
ConSEQUENCEial Slice:
We need five more to reach twenty-four
Fill in the five missing letters in this sequence of 24 letters:
_ E R _ N T W _ F U I V _ X G L Y D_ M B Q P CWhat are these missing letters, in order?
Extra Credit: Please share, if you wish, how you you arrived at your solution.
Riffing Off Shortz And Young Slices:
Little Tramp Transforms Into Sino-Sherlock
Will Shortz’s May 17th National Public Radio Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Joseph Young of St. Cloud, Minnesota, reads:
Name a famous actor of the past, seven letter first name and seven letter last name.
Remove three consecutive letters from him last name and the remaining letters in order will be the well known lead character from a long running series of films. What actor and character are these?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Young Slices read:
ENTREE #1
Anagram the combined letters of a two-word city associated with a puzzle-maker to form two words that, although not exact antonyms, are a bit “antonymish.”
A hyphenated synonym of the first word, if you remove the hyphen, replace the first letter with a letter near it in the alphabet, and then spell the result backward, yields two words related to puzzle-making.
The second word is an anagram of pennies, nickels, dimes, etc.
What are this city and its two anagrams?
What is the hyphenated synonym of the first anagram, and the two words related to puzzle-making?
What is the second word and its anagram?
(Note: Entree #2 through #7 were contributed by our brilliant friend Nodd, author of Puzzleria!s “Nodd ready for prime time.”)
ENTREE #2Name a famous actor of the past (5,7).
Remove the first two letters of both names and then switch the order of the names to name a comic book character.
Who are the actor and character?
ENTREE #3
Name a famous actor of the past (8,7). Move the third letter of the first name two places later in the alphabet. The first name will now spell the last name of the title character in a
famous film.
Now remove the fifth letter of the last name. The last name will now spell the first name of the title character in another famous film. Both films won Oscars for Best Picture.
Who is the actor and what are the films?
ENTREE #4Name a famous actor of the past (7,5). Change the fifth letter of the first name to an S. The first name will now spell the title character in a 1980s TV series. The actor’s last name is the last name of the title character in a comic strip and two TV series. Both title characters are in the same profession.
Who are the actor and characters?
ENTREE #5
Name an Oscar-nominated filmmaker of the past (4,7).His first name, followed by the last two letters of the name of a recent Oscar-winning filmmaker, will sound like the name of a famous character from romantic literature whose story was adapted to movies several times.
Who are the filmmakers and the character?
ENTREE #6Name a famous living actor (4,9).
Remove six consecutive letters and the space between the names to spell the last name of the title character in a popular “blaxploitation” film.
Who is the actor and what is the film?
ENTREE #7
Name a famous actor of the past (5,5). Remove five consecutive letters, and the space between the names, to name a well-known company.
Now go back to the original first and last names. Move the third letter of the last name four places later in the alphabet and
remove the last letter of that name.
The first and last names will now name the founder of another well-known company in the same industry as the company mentioned earlier. Who is the actor and what are the companies?
(Note: Entree #8 was contributed by our brilliant friend Plantsmith, author of Puzzleria!s “Garden of Puzzley Delights.”)
ENTREE #8Take a famous actor from the past –14 letters total in first and last names.
Replace last six letters of the last name with the initials of famous volunteer organization to
get a famous “living actor.”
Who are these two actors? What is the volunteer organization?
ENTREE #9
Name an past actor in 11 letters, first and last names.
Replace the 2nd and 3rd letters with the 7th letter, then move a duplicate of the last letter into the 4th position.Remove all spaces.
The result is a word associated with a literary character whose first name is an anagram of a variant spelling of a medical word associated with ulcers.
Who is this actor?
Who is the literary character, and what is the associated word?
What are the medical word and its variant spelling?
Dessert Menu
“Open Your Workbooks” Dessert:
Keeping time, weighing in... counting Geigers?
An “i” and “n” (both which appear within the physical quantity “distance”) form an abbreviation of “inch” (“in.”) which is a unit of distance.
Name a different measurable quantity – like time, electric current, mass, weight, force, etc. – that contains consecutive letters that spell a unit of that physical quantity... not just the abbreviation of the unit, but the entire word!What is the word for this measurable physical quantity, and the non-abbreviated unit of measure it “contains?”
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.
Note:
ReplyDeleteTo place a comment under this QUESTIONS? subheading (immediately below), or under any of the three subheadings below it (HINTS! and 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?
ReplyDeleteApp 10 says "Add one vowel to the beginning of first word to get third word." It looks to me like we should add a vowel to the beginning of the SECOND word to get the third word?
DeleteThank you, Nodd... wonderful editing! Fixed it.
DeleteLegoWhoOnceDubbedOurFriendViolinTeddyAs"ViolinTedditor"AndWhoIsNowAlsoToyingWithTheNotionOfDubbingOurFriendNoddAs"Nodditor"
HINTS:
ReplyDeleteSUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
Delete2. The actor could be described as an escape artist.
3. The actor and characters were all Brits.
4. One character is a private eye, the other a police detective.
5. The first director was the right man to direct or produce a slew of films starring former SNL cast members. The last two letters of the name of the second director are part of his first name.
6. The actor starred in an iconic film with the son of the actor in Entree 7.
7. This actor’s daughter, son, and granddaughter are movie stars too.
Solved #5, but I never got any further with #2(the answer to which I never found). Got anything on the comic book character I probably won't find, either?
DeletepjbNeverFound#5'sAnswerUnder"PastDirectors",ButItCameToHimThanksToTheFirstPartOfTheHint
The actor in #2 also took a bullet with Jacqueline Bisset in 1968, and was magnificent in 1960.
DeleteThe comic strip character in #3's first name is slang for cop.
Anybody else here take "Remove the first two letters of both names" to mean the first letters of the first name, then the last name? BTW There is no comic strip character in #3. I'm sure you meant #4, even though I never asked about that one. I got that one. I finally found #2's comic book character once I'd removed the TWO first letters from both names. In the future, Nodd, you might want to rephrase something like that to avoid obvious confusion.
DeletepjbHadTheRightActor,HeJustCouldn'tMakeHeadsOrTailsOfItAfterDoingTheRest(NotTotallyHisFaultThere!)
It didn't occur to me that anyone would read "first two letters of both names" to mean "first letter of each name."
DeleteRight, I meant #4. You didn't say in your post which comic book character you were having trouble with.
Late-Sunday-Early-Monday-Memorial-Day Hints!
DeleteSchpuzzle Of The Week"
Civic, Duty, Artistic Beauty
Consider just the surname of the artist. Remove four letters that can be rearranged into an order that equals 152. The remaining letters, if only slightly rearranged, spell something pictured in a still-life painting.
Ten Not-So-Easy Word-Teasy Appetizers:
“Solve All Seventeen!”
I shall allow our friend ViolinTeddy the first crack at providing hints for her Not-So-Easy Word-Teasy Appetizers
Clean Sheets But Dirty Sheep Hors d’Oeuvre:
SlumberJacks-and-LumberJills
Three consecutive letters in the bedroom-slumber-facilitator spell a sound made by a "milk-maker."
Three consecutive letters, rearranged slightly, spell the "milk-maker.
Three consecutive letters spell what crows do.
ConSEQUENCEial Slice:
We need five more to reach twenty-four
The missing letters, in reverse order, spell a kind of tree and a synonym of Shangri-la.
Riffing Off Shortz And Young Slices:
Little Tramp Transforms Into Sino-Sherlock!
ENTREE #1
The two words related to puzzle-making rhyme with BIRD and SPUN.
ENTREES #2 thru #7:
(Note: See Nodd's hints for his Entree #2 through #7 riffs in his May 24, 2026 at 12:01 PM Comment.)
(Note: Entree #8 was contributed by our brilliant friend Plantsmith, author of Puzzleria!s “Garden of Puzzley Delights.”)
ENTREE #8
"Two-car garage"
ENTREE #9
Kind of a "riff-off" on last Sunday's NPR puzzle...
"Warren Dolan?"b>
“Open Your Workbooks” Dessert:
Keeping time, weighing in... counting Geigers?
The "unit of energy, in reverse, is "a standardized test used for admissions by thousands of graduate and business schools worldwide."
LegoSundaySpillsIntoMemorialMondayHinting
E8- The organization seems pretty relevant to this week in particular.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteI'm just going to bed now (don't ask), but Lego asked if HE should do Appetizer hints for me. But since Thurs, I have been monitoring all these sections to see if anyone was commenting about being stuck on any of them, and I have seen NOTHING from anyone. Thus, I had figured they must be pretty easy for all of you. So PLEASE let me konw specific numbers if you need a hint. They are so hard to write, that I have no plans to waste time writing hints for ones that everyone has already solved. Thanks.
DeleteE8 "Well maybe--he got taken for a ride."
DeletePUZZLE RIFFS: and MY PROGRESS SO FAR...
ReplyDeleteMY PROGRESS SO FAR...
ReplyDeleteIF YOU HAVE COMMENTS THAT DO NOT PERTAIN TO ANY OF THE FOUR CATEGORIES ABOVE, YOU MAY WRITE THEM BELOW THIS POST. THANK YOU.
ReplyDeleteGood Friday evening to all regulars of this fine blog!
ReplyDeleteMom and I are fine. Once more, we did not eat out this evening. Bryan and Renae and the kids just weren't planning on it. So Mom and I got our own. She wanted a chicken pot pie from KFC. Since that's not my favorite restaurant, I had her go to Burger King for mine. She also had to stop by Walgreens to check on some of our prescriptions, and either BK or McDonald's are closest by. I had a chicken sandwich, fries, mozzarella fries, cheddar tots, and a cinnamon apple pie. I asked for a Dr. Pepper to drink because BK doesn't serve Diet Dr. Pepper, but Mom surprised me by getting a Pepsi Zero from KFC instead. She came back by the end of "Celebrity Wheel of Fortune"(rerun), and we ate. BTW Bryan and Renae and the kids are going to the condo for Memorial Day Weekend, but they haven't invited us. Mom's a little disappointed, but I'm okay with it. I have to go back to the dentist on Wednesday, and I never have enjoyed having to go spend a few days at the condo, and then having to get ready for my next appointment as soon as we get back. I hate having the two coincide like that. If and when I do go back, I hope to have nothing else like that planned so soon after coming home. It's just a bit much all at once, IMHO. Mom says we'll be doing something similar to what we did tonight on Memorial Day Evening. Possibly hers from Full Moon BBQ, and mine from Wendy's. We'll talk about it later. She's already suggested Full Moon.
I looked over the latest puzzles late last night, but I don't have any answers just yet. Hopefully I can solve a few after I'm finished here. Looking forward to any and all hints going into next week.
Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and may we all have a great Memorial Day holiday, no matter how we each choose to celebrate it. Cranberry out!
pjbAlsoThoughtMr.ColbertHadAGreatSeriesFinaleLastNight(CleverThrowbackToThatOf"St.Elsewhere"AtTheEnd,InCaseAnyoneElseHereVaguelyRemembersThatOneAsWell!)
To all participants and followers of this blog:
ReplyDeleteOur May 28th edition of Puzzlerial! may be in jeopardy. Somehow I did something (I have no idea what it was!) that will now not allow me to access my AOL service. This was an account I started back in 2006! It was working yesterday, I think (I believe I might have emailed Eco and Nodd and perhaps others also.) Over the years I have employed many passwords and even usernames other than jrywriter@aol.com (which is part of the problem, likely. The problem I am having is knowing what to type in when AOL asks you for verification of your identity. What I type in does not seem to jive with what they want me to type in! They do have a phone number I could call to talk to one of their expert troubleshooters.... I just called it... they are not available in during these current wee hours; nor are they available on Sunday; and it is a good bet they will not be available on Memorial Day either!
My apologies to all.... I really am a Luddite when it comes to this "technical stuff!"
LegoAplogetically!
Lego, that sounds terrible! Hope you can access your account again soon.
DeleteIs it just your email that's not working? Maybe you could just open a new account.
DeleteIf there's anything I can do to help, please let me know!
Lego, I just emailed you and it seemed to transmit okay. If you don't get it, please let me know.
DeleteSo sorry to read that, Lego. Hope you're back with us again by Wednesday!
DeletepjbHasn'tGotEverythingAnsweredYet,SoWe'llDefinitelyNeedTheOfficialAnswersAtTheRegularTime(SomeOfUsWillAnyway)
Wondering, at this point, if you were able to SEE the two emails I sent to you, Lego...or if you can even SEE all our emails here.....had hoped that perhaps the 'third party cookies' might have something to do with it (as I wrote you had just occurred to my own computer, preventing my even being able to POST on here)....another possibility is that Java Script somehow got disabled so I was told via Google (don't ask me how this stuff works; I just Google and ask " how do you...blah blah blah" when there is a problem.
DeleteHURRAH...LEGO HAS HIS EMAIL BACK! I was surprised to see he had not yet posted that fact here, so I wanted to let you guys know the good news!
DeleteThanks to ViolinTeddy, who "broke" my good news in her "ViolinTeddyMay 24, 2026 at 9:06 PM" comment, above.
DeleteLegoBackInTheSaddleAfterATemporary"Skedaddle!"
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteTo my astonishment, the "delete" icon is suddenly back...I have not seen it here for about a year. I have NO idea what made it return, other than the ill-fated business with the 'third party cookies' having turned themselves OFF and my having had to turn them back ON in the wee hours of this morning. Weird all the way around.
DeleteAn update on my NOW RESOLVED email woes:
ReplyDeleteThanks to assistance from my friend Mary, and from over-the-phone counsel from a helpful AOL Mail Tech... it seems my AOL woes may be gone!
Staring from scratch by creating a new email account was a good option, of course. However, salvaging the account (which includes the history of many past years of my AOL correspondence activity) was the better option for me. I am very grateful to all of you!
LegoWhoGetsByWithALittleHelpFromHisFriends
Schpuzzle: (Post hint: ) SANDRO BOTTICELLI; BALLOT DIRECTIONS
ReplyDeleteApp: 1. MODERATE; 2. INVALID; 3. VAULT; 4. GORGE; 5. SLALOM, SHALOM; 6. IRRIGATION, IRRITATION; 7. TAPER, TAPIR; 8. MAORI, NAOMI; 9. APPOINTMENT, OINTMENT; 10. LAPS, LAPSE, ELAPSE
Hors d’Oeuvre: PILLOW CASE, OW, PILL CASE
Slice: Z, O, H, S, A (Extra Credit: This puzzle before, although with different “fill-in-the-blank” answers :). I think I - eventually - solved it the first time. It is the first appearance of each letter when you write out all of the numbers in English; i.e., zero, one, two, three, … six … thousand, million, billion, etc.)
Entrees:
1. SAINT CLOUD, ADULT, SCION; GROWN-UP, PUN, WORD; SCION, COINS
2. STEVE MCQUEEN, QUEEN EVE
3. LAURENCE OLIVIER; LAWRENCE), OLIVER
4. SPENCER TRACY, SPENSER (FOR HIRE), DICK TRACY
5. IVAN REITMAN, BONG JOON-HO, IVANHOE
6. JACK NICHOLSON, TNT JACKSON
7. HENRY FONDA, HONDA, (HENRY) FORD
8. DAVID CARRADINE, DAVID CARUSO; USO (UNITED SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS)
9. WARNER OLAND; ALICE, WONDERLAND; ILIAC, ILEAC
Dessert: ENERGY, ERG
When I was fumbling around with the Slice, and looked up synonyms for Shangri-La, even guessing that OZ was what we wanted, Google insisted the OZ was NOT a synonym of Shangri-La, so I gave up. And I had guessed the wrong tree anyway (oak, instead of Ash)....sigh..oh well...
DeleteSCHPUZZLE – BALLOT DIRECTIONS; SANDRO BOTTICELLI
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZERS
1. MODERATE (ALT – RULE)
2. INVALID
3. VAULT
4. GORGE
5. ?
6. IRRIGATION, IRRITATION
7. TAPER, TAPIR
8. MAORI, NAOMI (CAMPBELL)
9. APPOINTMENT, OINTMENT
10. LAPS, LAPSE, ELAPSE
HORS D’OEUVRE – PILLOWCASE, OW, PILL CASE
SLICE ?
ENTREES
1. SAINT CLOUD; ADULT, SCION (COINS); GROWN-UP, PUN, WORD
2. STEVE MCQUEEN, QUEEN EVE
3. LAURENCE OLIVIER; “LAWRENCE OF ARABIA”; “OLIVER!”
4. SPENCER TRACY; SPENSER (“SPENSER: FOR HIRE), DICK TRACY
5. IVAN REITMAN, BONG JUN HO; IVANHOE
6. JACK NICHOLSON; “ACTION JACKSON”
7. HENRY FONDA; HONDA, FORD
8. DAVID CARRADINE, DAVID CARUSO; USO
9. WARNER OLAND; ALICE; WONDERLAND; ILEAC, ILIAC (however, it appears ileac and iliac are different words rather than variant spellings of the same word)
DESSERT – ENERGY, ERG
Who knew that there would be more than one blaxploitation title character with the last name Jackson?
DeleteSCHPUZZLE: BALLOT DIRECTIONS => SANDRO BOTTICELLI [Hint: CLII, BOTTLE]
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZERS: Because I see that Tortie and Nodd have the answers, and my computer is deciding to frustrate me by constantly twirling its frustrating "rainbow of death", which I don't have the time for right now, I won't bother inserting them here (since Lego will anyway, later on) and I never did get around to typing them out all by themselves.
HORS D’O: PILLOW CASE minus "OW “ => PILL CASE
SLICE: OAK ?? Having seen Tortie's answer above accidentally, I eliminated what my own stab at it had been, other than my guess for the hinted-at tree.
ENTREES:
1. SAINT CLOUD => ADULT, SCION => GROWN-UP => PUN WORD; COINS
DESSERT: ENERGY => ERG [Original pre-hint guess: VOLTAGE => VOLT]
Rainbow of death? Is that like the NBC peacock logo?
DeleteNice apps by the way..
DeleteHa ha ha ha, PLantie....that's what I am given to understand that "mac fans" call the wretched, frustrating, spinning wheel in rainbow colors, that appears when the computer decides to just freeze, and not go anywhere....and one has to wait and wait and wait.... Grrrr.....
DeleteBut thank you for the apps comment. Nobody said a word this week about them, so I didn't know whether they were FAR TOO EASY, or what. My favorite of the bunch (and the first one I thought of months ago) was the SLALOM/SHALOM pair.
I know they are a lot of work
DeleteVT, I enjoyed your apps, and I didn't find them to be too easy. My solving pattern was way off this week. I had extra things to do and I just didn't feel like solving puzzles on most days. I didn't finish solving your apps until yesterday morning - so, no, not too easy!
DeleteAt this point, Tortie, with a new P! up, I don't know if you will even SEE this post, but thank you! Lego kept saying they were fine, but I had no real confidence, given how smart you guys are and how you and Nodd, in particular, seem to solve impossible puzzles (i.e. the kind that require hours perusing lists). But they seem to mostly be the oNLY kind of puzzles that ever occur to me, and I find myself fascinated with the craziness of our English language, i.e. how the same word can mean two things that have utterly NOTHING to do with each other. As in, HOW on earth did those meanings ever come to be in the first place?
DeleteSchpuzzle
ReplyDeleteBALLOT DIRECTIONS, SANDRO BOTTICELLI
Appetizer Menu
1. MODERATE
2. INVALID
(Both had words with two different pronunciations.)
3. VAULT
4. GORGE
5. SLALOM, SHALOM
6. IRRIGATION, IRRITATION
7. TAPER, TAPIR
8. MAORI, NAOMI
9. APPOINTMENT, OINTMENT
10. LAPS, LAPSE, ELAPSE
Menu
Clean Sheets But Dirty Sheep Hors d'Oeuvre
PILLOWCASE, OW, PILL CASE
Entrees
1. SAINT CLOUD, ADULT, SCION, GROWN-UP, PUN, WORD, COINS
2. STEVE McQUEEN, QUEEN EVE(not really called "Queen Eve" where I found it, though)
3. LAURENCE OLIVIER, (T. E.)LAWRENCE("Lawrence of Arabia", 1962), OLIVER(Twist, "Oliver!", 1968)
4. SPENCER TRACY, SPENSER("Spenser: For Hire"), (Dick)TRACY
5. IVAN REITMAN, BONG JOON HO, IVANHOE
6. JACK NICHOLSON, "ACTION JACKSON"
7. HENRY FONDA, HONDA, HENRY FORD
8. DAVID CARRADINE, DAVID CARUSO, USO(United Service Organizations)
9. WARNER OLAND, WONDERLAND, ALICE, ILEAC or ILIAC
"Open Your Workbooks" Dessert
ENERGY, ERG
Did you ever go to the dentist, and they gave you the nitrous oxide, but for some unknown reason it wasn't working like it usually does, and the dentist/nurse turns it all the way up so, while you don't feel it the same way, now you feel dizzy and they end up sending you out in a wheelchair? Happened to me earlier this afternoon. I usually feel absolutely frozen(but feeling good), but what with it not doing like it usually does, I seemed to have had some sort of panic attack, and felt like I couldn't even think straight, and they even had to check my blood pressure(which was fine), and I had to drink something and have a little something to eat because I hadn't had anything before I got ready(Coke Zero and a miniature Hershey bar), and I basically came away from it all rather puzzled about the whole thing. I wasn't even sure why I had to go back at all, because last time I had a crown put in, and this time they ended up having to mostly scrape calculus from my teeth(which hurt just a little more thanks to the gas not really working). Not the best trip to the dentist that I've ever had, thank you very much. My lunch from Whataburger definitely helped, that and just sitting there relaxing watching GSN for a few hours. Hope that gas actually works next time. I don't know how that all could have happened, but I'm glad it's over(still have to use a special rinse for it and floss a little more).-pjb
Yeesh, sounds scary!
DeleteYes-I was overdosed and passed out in the dentist chair while supposedly waiting for the Doctor. I don't know if they just forgot about me or what. I should have filed a complaint. Too much of that stuff can be dangerous.
ReplyDeletePuzzleria 5-27-26” 71 degrees. With some sun breaks
ReplyDeleteSCHPUZZLE -
Apps
1. Rule
2. invalid
3. vault
4. gorge
5.
6.
7. Taper, Tapir
8. Maori, Naomi
9.Appointment, ointmet
10. Laps, Lapse, elapse
HORS D’OEUVRE –
ENTREES
1. Saint Cloud, adult, Scion -coins, grown up, pun, word.
2.
8. David Carradine, David Caruso, USO, If i had said “Okay Frank, —put it on ice.” Probably TMI.
9.
. Dessert – Energy, Erg
I don't think there's really such a thing as TMI on Puzzleria!, especially during the hint period, unless you just say the answer outright. I know Blaine's blog is another story.
DeleteAnd your dentist story sounds ever worse than pjb's!
This week's Official Answers for the record, part 1:
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle Of The Week"
Civic, Duty, Artistic Beauty
Name instructions, in two words, that voters may be given at the polls on election day – either orally or in written form.
Anagram the combined letters of these two words to name a famous artist.
Who is it?
What are the instructions?
Answer:
Sandro Botticelli (known for his paintings "The Birth of Venus,' "Primavera," and "The Adoration of the Magi");
"Election Day Instructions" = BALLOT DIRECTIONS
Lego...
This week's Official Answers for the record, part 2:
ReplyDeleteTen Not-So-Easy Word-Teasy Appetizers:
“Solve All Seventeen!”
Find the seventeen words in the puzzles below:
ONE-WORD SOLUTIONS
Find one-word solutions to:
1. One-word: average vs preside
2. One word: null vs sick
3. One word: jump vs safe
4. One word: Overeat vs fissure
TWO-WORD SOLUTIONS
Find two-word solutions to:
5. Two words: A race vs a greeting
[The second letters, both consonants, differ]
6. Two words: Moistening vs annoyance
[The fifth letters, both consonants, differ]
7. Two words: A type of candle vs a snouty mammal
[The fourth letters, both vowels, differ]
8. Two words: Native of a South Pacific Island vs first name of a female model
[The first letters (both consonants) are adjacent in the alphabet (no letters between them); the fourth letters (also both consonants) are five spots apart in the alphabet (four letters between them)]
9. Two words: Take a word for ‘meeting’; remove the first three letters to get a word for ‘balm’.
THREE-WORD SOLUTION
Find a three-word solution to:
10. Three words:
What you might do to stay in shape...
vs what happens when you let it (or anything) go to pot...
vs pass or expire.
[Add one vowel to the end of first word to get a second word]
[Add one vowel to the beginning of first word to get third word]
Answers:
ONE-WORD SOLUTIONS
1. MODERATE
2. INVALID
3. VAULT
4. GORGE
TWO-WORD SOLUTIONS
5. SLALOM & SHALOM
6. IRRIGATION & IRRITATION
7. TAPER & TAPIR
8. MAORI & NAOMI
9. APPOINTMENT & OINTMENT
THREE-WORD SOLUTION
10. LAPS & LAPSE & ELAPSE
Lego...
This week's Official Answers for the record, part 3:
ReplyDeleteClean Sheets But Dirty Sheep Hors d’Oeuvre:
SlumberJacks-and-LumberJills
Remove consecutive interior letters from something in the bedroom that facilitates slumber.
The removed letters spell a word associated with pain, and therefore contrary to slumber.
What remains, however, are two words for something conducive to sleep and pain relief that “log-sawing slumberers” may keep handy by their bedsides.
What are this slumber-facilitator, painful word, and the thing conducive to pain relief and sleep?
What are these words?
Answer:
Pillowcase; Ow! Pill case
ConSEQUENCEial Slice:
We need five more to reach twenty-four
Fill in the five missing letters in this sequence of 24 letters:
_ E R _ N T W _ F U I V _ X G L Y D _ M B Q P C
What are they, in order?
Answer:
Z, O, H, S, A
Z E R O N T W H F U I V S X G L Y D A M B Q P C
Explanation:
When you spell out numbers from zero to infinity, 24 of the 26 letters appear in the following order:
ZERO, oNe, TWo, tHree, FoUr, fIVe, SiX, eiGht, eLeven, twentY, hunDred, thousAnd, Million, Billion, Quadrillion, sePtillion, oCtillion...
The first time any letter appears in the sequence, it is allowed to remain in the sequence; all subsequent repetitions of those letters, however, are deleted. (J and K do not appear... No, JILLION and KAZILLION do NOT "count!")
Riffing Off Shortz And Young Slices:
Little Tramp Transforms Into Sino-Sherlock!
Will Shortz’s May 17th National Public Radio Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Joseph Young of St. Cloud, Minnesota, reads:
Name a famous actor of the past, seven letter first name and seven letter last name. Remove three consecutive letters from him last name and the remaining letters in order will be the well known lead character from a long running series of films. What actor and character are these?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Young Slices read:
ENTREE #1
Anagram the combined letters of a two-word city associated with a puzzle-maker to form two words that, although not exact antonyms, are a bit “antonymish.”
A hyphenated synonym of the first word, if you remove the hyphen, replace the first letter with a letter near it in the alphabet, and then spell the result backward, yields two words related to puzzle-making.
The second word is an anagram of pennies, nickels, dimes, etc.
What are this city and its two anagrams?
What is the hyphenated synonym of the first anagram, and the two words related to puzzle-making?
What is the second word and its anagram?
Answer:
Saint Cloud (Minnesota); adult, scion;
Grown-up (a synonym of "adult" and, when "G" is changed to "D" and the result spelled backward, becomes "Pun, Word" (two "puzzle-making words")
Scion; (Coins)
Lego...
This week's Official Answers for the record, part 4:
ReplyDelete(Note: Entree #2 through #7 were contributed by our brilliant friend Nodd, author of Puzzleria!s “Nodd ready for prime time.”),
ENTREE #2
Name a famous actor of the past (5,7). Remove the first two letters of both names and then switch the order of the names to name a comic book character. Who are the actor and character?
Answer:
STEVE MCQUEEN; QUEEN EVE
ENTREE #3
Name a famous actor of the past (8,7). Move the third letter of the first name two places later in the alphabet. The first name will now spell the last name of the title character in a famous film.
Now remove the fifth letter of the last name. The last name will now spell the first name of the title character in another famous film. Both films won Oscars for Best Picture. Who is the actor and what are the films?
Answer:
LAURENCE OLIVIER; “LAWRENCE OF ARABIA”, “OLIVER!”
ENTREE #4
Name a famous actor of the past (7,5). Change the fifth letter of the first name to an S. The first name will now spell the title character in a 1980s TV series. The actor’s last name is the last name of the title character in a comic strip and two TV series. Both title characters are in the same profession. Who are the actor and characters?
Answer:
SPENCER TRACY; SPENSER (“SPENSER: FOR HIRE”), DICK TRACY
ENTREE #5
Name an Oscar-nominated filmmaker of the past (4,7). His first name, followed by the last two letters of the name of a recent Oscar-winning filmmaker, will sound like the name of a famous character from romantic literature whose story was adapted to movies several times. Who are the filmmakers and the character?
Answer:
IVAN REITMAN, BONG JOON HO; IVANHOE
ENTREE #6
Name a famous living actor (4,9). Remove six consecutive letters and the space between the names to spell the last name of the title character in a popular “blaxploitation” film. Who is the actor and what is the film?
Answer:
JACK NICHOLSON; “ACTION JACKSON”
ENTREE #7
Name a famous actor of the past (5,5). Remove five consecutive letters, and the space between the names, to name a well-known company.
Now go back to the original first and last names. Move the third letter of the last name four places later in the alphabet and remove the last letter of that name. The first and last names will now name the founder of another well-known company in the same industry as the company mentioned earlier. Who is the actor and what are the companies?
Answer:
HENRY FONDA; HONDA, FORD
Lego...
This week's Official Answers for the record, part 5:
ReplyDelete(Note: Entree #8 was contributed by our brilliant friend Plantsmith, author of Puzzleria!s “Garden of Puzzley Delights.”)
ENTREE #8
Take a famous actor from the past –14 letters total in the first and last names.
Replace last six letters of the last name with the initials of famous volunteer organization to get a famous “living actor.”
Who are these two actors? What is the volunteer organization?
Answer:
David Carradine ("Kung Fu");
David Caruso ("CSI: Miami")
(CARRIDINE – RIDINE + USO (UNITED SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS)
ENTREE #9
Name an past actor in 11 letters, first and last names.
Replace the 2nd and 3rd letters with the 7th letter, then move a duplicate of the last letter into the 4th position.
Remove all spaces.
The result is a word associated with a literary character whose first name is an anagram of a variant spelling of a medical word associated with ulcers.
Who is this actor?
Who is the literary character, and what is the associated word?
What are the medical word and its variant spelling?
Answer:
Warner Oland (who portrayed Charlie Chan);
(WARNER OLAND => W O NER LAND => WONDERLAND)
Alice (in) Wonderland; ileal (variant spelling of "ileac")
“Open Your Workbooks” Dessert:
Keeping time, weighing in... counting Geigers?
An “i” and “n” (both which appear within the physical quantity “distance”) form an abbreviation of “inch” (“in.”) which is a unit of distance.
Name a different measurable quantity – like time, electric current, mass, weight, force, etc. – that contains consecutive letters that spell a unit of that physical quantity... not just the abbreviation of the unit, but the entire word!
What is the word for this measurable physical quantity, and the non-abbreviated unit of measure it “contains?”
Answer:
Energy; Erg
(enERGy)
Lego!