Thursday, June 11, 2026

“Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex” Two words... for the same bird; “Order in the Countdown Court!” Just a couple-a words in a couplet “A Nuclear (Family) Threat?” “It just don’t seem to add up... or subtract down!”

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Just a couple o’ words in a couplet

Breezes toss and tickle rippling prints and tints,

Making taut the “sails” of clothes-pinned billowy chintz.

Within that couplet thou shalt find a pair

Of words that both a rare distinction share.

So (“unpoetically” now!) what unusual property do a couple of words in that couplet share?

Appetizer Menu

Delightfully Puzzley “Discophilia” Appetizer:

“Order in the Countdown Court!”

The list below  – if we base it on certain songtitles associated with the artists – is out of order. 

Can you put them in a more logical and numerically fitting order?  

On what did you base that order?  

What song titles did you use? 

Which song title was “doubly relevant”?

    1. David Bowie 

    2. The White Stripes 

    3. Bobby Bland 

    4. Three Dog Night 

    5. Freddie King 

    6. Sonny Boy Williams 

    7. Nina Simone 

    8. Dusty Springfield

    9. B.B. King  

    10. Merle Travis 

MENU

Unclear & Conflicted Hors d’Oeuvre:

A Nuclear (Family) Threat?

Name an informal term for a member of the nuclear family. 

Remove one of its letters to name a potentially life-threatening response triggered by the human immune system...

(Well, that’s kind of a downer... but consider this: If you replace a letter of that life-threatening response with a P, the result will be things that are enjoyable and refreshing!

What are this informal family-member term, life-threatening response, and things that are enjoyable and refreshing?

Birds-Of-Wordprey Slice:

Two words... for the same bird

Switch the initial sounds of two words:

~ some two-syllable colorful tropical birds and...

~ some two-syllable “Down-Under” mountain-dwelling endangered species of those same birds. 

The result (if you spell and pronounce the “Down Under” bird as if its last letter were a “y”) sounds like two foods that are often served together as a side dish. The colors of these foods share four common letters. 

What are these two birds and two foods?

Riffing Off Shortz Slices:

“Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex”

Will Shortz’s June 7th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle reads:

Rearrange the letters of “NECESSARY MISPRINT” to spell a familiar phrase.

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Name an American idiomatic phrase that means "being in an enviable, highly advantageous, or superior position," in five words of 2, 2, 3, 7 and 4 letters. Rearrange this 18 letters to spell three words associated with the Bible:

~ a synonym of Eden,

~ a unit of Ark measurement, and

~ the ordinal number of the commandment
that proscribes coveting.

What are this phrase and three biblical words?

(Note: Entrees #2 through #7 were composed by our friend Nodd, author of “Nodd ready for prime time” on Puzzleria!)

ENTREE #2

You can rearrange the letters in a two-word food item you might have on your breakfast table to spell a two-word description of the 1942 film “Kings Row.” What are the item and the description?

ENTREE #3

You can rearrange the letters in another two-word food item you might have on your breakfast table to spell a two-word description of what happened when the cold, hungry grasshopper implored the ants to let him into their shelter in the 1934 Disney film “The Grasshopper and the Ants.” 

What are the item and the description?

ENTREE #4

You can rearrange the letters in a third two-word food item you might have on your breakfast table to spell, in two words, what the producers of “Jeopardy!” undertook after Alex Trebek passed away. 

What is the item and what did the producers undertake?

ENTREE #5

Name a two-word phrase for something businesses are typically trying to achieve.

Rearrange its letters to get a two-word phrase for something that might get you arrested. 

What are the two phrases?

ENTREE #6

Rearrange the letters of a two-word subject currently in the news to get a phrase describing, in two words and one initialism, what the U.S. Air Force would be doing if they
were charged with evacuating the customers of a U.S. espionage organization from a foreign country. 

What are the subject and the phrase?

ENTREE #7

Rearrange the letters in the first and last names of a controversial business magnate to get the last names of a controversial baseball
manager of the past and a controversial current head of state. 

Who are these three persons?

ENTREE #8

If you rearrange the letters of TUTU and BERET (see image) you can spell three words: (1) a wager, (2) the name of a boy king, and (3) a synonym of the verb “regret.” 

Or, you can spell a whirlpool site, dimpled-sphere-prop and divot.

Or, You can spell a montana city and a synonym of “factual and accurate.”

Or... you can spell a familiar phrase.

What is this phrase? 

Dessert Menu

“Just sum screwy math... what’s the difference?” Dessert:

“It just don’t seem to add up... or subtract down!”

Explain how the six equations below might possibly be true:

1. Five minus two equals four.

2. Six minus one equals nine.

3. Seven minus four equals five.

4. Eight minus four equals one.

5. Eleven minus five equals five.

6. Twelve minus four equals fifty-five.

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.

82 comments:

  1. Note:
    To 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...

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  2. Replies
    1. Lego, I haven't read a word yet of the new puzzles. (Too much else going on). However, when my eye dropped on the 5 PI e-squared (which i dont' know hOW to type properly), I went to look up how much that was, and it's just under 116. Now, if a 'slice served' is considered to be an individual puzzle, then 12 years times 12 months times who knows HOW many puzzles per week (15? More?) is a whole lot MORE than 116 puzzles. Is there any way to actually come up with how many puzzles have been 'served' here?

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    2. I just solved both the Hors D'O and the Slice, happily. However, I disagree that the endangered second bird is only ONE syllable....Google says it is pronounced in two syllables, and that is also what I had always assumed.

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    3. RE Entree #1: I think there's a typo, since 2 + 2 + 3 + 7 + 4 add up to 18, not 28 as stated.

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    4. Tortie, Regarding your June 11, 2026 at 2:33 PM comment...
      My best guess is that we,e averaged 10--12 puzzles a week over our 12+ years (April 2014-June 2026). 12 years X 52 weeks X 10 puzzles = about 6,240 puzzles... if my math holds up.
      LegoThinksThatSeemsLikeTooManyThough...

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    5. Thank you, Tortie, for you "ViolinTedditing" on my Entree #1. Thanks to you, it is now fixed.

      LegoWhoBelievesThattheWord"Joseph"Means"HeWhoAdds"...WellMaybeButNotveryWell!

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    6. For some reason, Lego, you are have called me "Tortie" (as happened once some weeks ago) TWICE above, but I can't figure out why your first of those two posts references a 2:33 p.m. posting time [this blog seems to adjust for different time zones, I have noticed], because the post I had intially written about the '5 Pi e-squared" was at 10:47 p.m. MY time (PDT), which would translate to 12:47 a.m. CDT.----no 2:33 p.m. involved.

      As for the actual math, I would guess that there have been WAY more than 10 puzzles per week (unless you started out with many fewer in the first year or so)....meaning that I suspect there have been many MORE than 6,240 of them!

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    7. ViolinTeddy!
      My sincere apologies! No excuse for this, of course, but I do seem to have some strange things happening in my "brain" lately.
      I will make a real effort to clean up my act!

      LegoLosingIt

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    8. That first year of Puzzleria! (2014) was much different than how our blog eventually evolved. There were fewer puzzles (2 or 3, perhaps 4) and I wrote almost all of them. I am quite pleased with the way it has evolved over the years. Every puzzle-maker has her/his own style and strengths. I am always open to suggestions for improvements (fewer puzzles, for example, which I have heeded somewhat... but just a bit) but I am also a tad stubborn (as many of you already know!). Our rotating "guest puzzlemaker" strategy is surely our greatest strength, in my opinion.
      LegoWhoWondersWhatYourTakesMayBe

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    9. That's really interesting to know, since I didn't know about Puzzleria during its entire first year. I still think that even a whole first year of only up to 4 puzzles does NOT reduce the average weekly puzzle (i.e. considering 11 more years of many MORE puzzles) to only 10. But I guess none of this matters!

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    10. Regarding the App, I can't find any "Sonny Boy Williams" on the Internet. Is it supposed to be Sonny Boy Williamson?

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  3. Replies
    1. SUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
      2. The Gipper always was one for histrionics.
      3. Doris Day ate the breakfast item in 1960.
      4. Love your brother.
      5. Downsizing, unfortunately, is one method often used.
      6. A subject of much discussion on Blaine’s blog, often mockingly.
      7. The magnate outfoxed a lot of people.

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    2. #7 was the easiest hands down, I have no idea where there could be any mention of the word in #3 in any sort of two-word breakfast item(and I looked!), and I'm pretty sure a good many things have been discussed mockingly on Blaine's Blog, so some narrowing down will be necessary there.
      pjbIsLuckyEverySoOftenWhenTheLeastBitOfSomethingInTheHintsActuallyCanBeFiguredOutToHaveSomeConnectionToTheOriginalPuzzle,ButOfCourseThisDoesn'tAlwaysHappen(OrElseI'dHaveMoreThanJust#7,Wouldn'tI?)

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    3. App: Two of the songs share four words and only differ in their first words.

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    4. Thanks for the hints. Unfortunately, I'm still stuck on Entrees 2-5. And none of my song titles share four words, so I'll go back and look again if I'm up to it.

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    5. MORE HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
      2. The breakfast item is a fruit spread.
      3. Doris Day ate the breakfast item in “Please Don’t Eat the Daisies.”
      4. The previous hint, love your brother, was a reference to a city.
      5. The thing that might get you arrested involves bodily parts.
      6. People worry it will eliminate their jobs.
      7. The magnate’s media empire strongly supports the head of state.

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    6. Tortis- I am sure there are alternates.

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    7. Lego, any hints forthcoming for the Schpuzzle?

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    8. Nodd, thanks for the additional hints. I finally made progress. I'm only missing #5 now.

      VT, Stu likes these kinds of words.

      TortieWhoIsSorryToGiveNoddFlashbacksRe:ThePamelaPuzzle

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    9. Tortie, I hate to be dense (but given the stress I am currently under, my brain is clearly not in top form), but WHO is 'STU" that you referred to, I am assuming relative to the Schpuzzle?

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    10. VT, "Stu" has the same sort of pattern as the two words you are looking for.

      Hope your stress goes away soon!

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    11. Tortie, flashback gratefully accepted! (Coincidentally, a kind of "flash" is also involved in the thing that could get you arrested in Entree 5. Or a "streak" might be involved too.)

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    12. #2, #3, and #4 so far! Once the breakfast foods ran out, it got a lot tougher.
      pjbNoticedDorisDayActuallyAteTwoDifferentBreakfastItemsInTheFilm(DisregardTheBrandName!)

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    13. Nodd, thanks for the additional hint. I actually tried anagramming the thing that businesses try to do yesterday, and didn't see the action that could get you arrested. I also found two poor ways of trying to do the business practice that has to do with eliminating some really cheap sweet food perks.

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  4. PUZZLE RIFFS: and MY PROGRESS SO FAR...

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  5. Replies
    1. In addition to Hors D'O and Slice mentioned above in questions, I have managed to work out Entrees 1, 7 (got lucky) and 8, as well as Dessert. NO idea how to tackle the Schpuzzle, Appetizer or any of the other entrees (though I THOUGHT I was on the road to Entree 2, but alas....)

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    2. Got all the song titles in the Appetizer(more than one for Merle Travis, if I'm right), both the Hors d'Oeuvre and the Slice(not sure about the pronunciation for one of the birds), and Entrees #1 and #8(easiest ones). Hope the hints to come will help to solve all others.
      pjbCanSeeNoddDidAwayWithAnyAndAllSongReferencesInTheEntreesThisTime!

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    3. Actually VT- three words in your comment above- in the last -sentence- occur in two of the song titles.

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    4. Just now saw your comment, altho I guess it was just posted today....I'm sorry, but I wil lnot have the time to even try to tackled your Appetizers. I suspect I know at least ONE of the words to which you are referring, tho.

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    5. No problem. Think Willie Nelson.

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    6. Indeed, Plantie, the 'two words' to which you referred DID make me think of Willie Nelson, but then I did NOT see his name in your list of singers when I went to look (did I miss him?)

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    7. He sang "on the road again." Someone else sang about "??? ???? on the road."

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    8. Well, Glen Campbell sang "King OF the Road", but he's not one of your guys in the puzzle. I'm afraid the phrase you hinted at above simply does not come to me.

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    9. It's ??? days on the road- and the unknown first word is a number- as it is in two songs. You are getting warmer.

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  6. IF YOU HAVE COMMENTS THAT DO NOT PERTAIN TO ANY OF THE FOUR CATEGORIES ABOVE, YOU MAY WRITE THEM BELOW THIS POST. THANK YOU.

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  7. Might a pun I polish fit between
    Two things we all wish could be seen?

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    Replies
    1. Very nice couplet commenting on my "Just a couple o’ words in a couplet" Schpuzzle, Paul.

      LegoSensesThatPaulHathTheSoulOfAPoet

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    2. Are you talking about Sydney Sweeney? PFM.

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    3. PUN I POLISH is a rearrangement of UPSILON & PHI, the two Greek letters between TAU (as In TAUT), and CHI (as in CHINTZ)

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  8. Good Friday evening to you all!
    Mom and I are fine. She had a few errands to run, and she's already come back. She said something about stopping at Arby's for one of their Market Fresh chicken salad sandwiches(as advertised), so I put in my order as well(half-pound roast beef sandwich, curly fries, Diet Dr. Pepper, and an apple turnover). Didn't realize she'd come back so soon, though. Because it had come a flood a few hours ago, and it looked to her like it would soon start up again, Mom came back about 5:45. With supper. Probably the earliest we've ever had supper in recent years! Imagine my surprise when I heard the car horn beeping around 5:45! But she said the weather was a factor, so I guess it was okay. Not sure I was totally ready to eat again, but I managed. I also got potato cakes instead of curly fries(the former are Mom's favorite, and she ate much of one of mine, but she gave it back to me to finish). I may have to have a snack later, but earlier than usual. Anyway, now I have a little more time to try to work on the latest puzzles here(though I already checked everything last night, and I can't promise anything).
    Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and if you haven't tried them already, I recommend the potato cakes. They are pretty good. Cranberry out!
    pjbAlsoHasTheGuardianPrizeCrosswordALittleLaterTonight,AndHe'sAlreadySolvedTheNewPrivateEyeCrosswordLateLastNight(SoNotMuchElseToHaveToLookAtThisEvening)

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    Replies
    1. Potato cakes at Arby's? Maybe only on the East coast side.

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  9. It's actually Sonny Boy WILLIAMSON, not Williams, and by my count, Merle Travis actually has three song titles that would qualify here if my estimation of the connection between the song titles is correct.
    pjbHasn'tPutTheSongTitlesInOrderYet(IfItIsTrulyNecessary)

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    Replies
    1. I found a few song titles that fit (I think - if I have the logic right) for several of the artists. It doesn't look like we're only going for big hits. I only know one song by Sonny Boy Williamson and that's because I know the Yardbirds cover.

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    2. Tort-. Yes what separates a big hit from a not so big hit? And after Luke Combs did his version of "Fast Cars" and shot it into the stratosphere-is it now a big hit and was not before? Is it the number of discs sold? Number of plays on Spotify? Inquiring minds wish to know. And are there any two hit wonders out there?

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    3. I remember the Tracy Chapman original version of "Fast Car" from years ago, and I always thought it was a big hit then.

      I tend to go by Billboard Top 100 and Boomer / Gen X radio play to determine "big hit" at least for oldies. I guess nowadays it really is more Spotify / YouTube.

      What are two hit wonders? Acts that have only two big hits? I'm sure there are plenty. One off the top of my head is the Left Banke with "Walk Away Renee" and "Pretty Ballerina."

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    4. Golden Earring with "Radar Love" and "Twilight Zone". Ozark Mountain Daredevils with "If You Wanna Get To Heaven" and "Jackie Blue". Climax Blues Band with "Couldn't Get It Right" and "I Love You". Nazareth with "Love Hurts" and "Hair of the Dog". Those are just off the top of my head.
      pjbHasHeardAllOfTheseMoreOftenThanTheLeftBankeSongs,That'sForSure

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    5. I'm more of an oldies fan, so I've heard the Left Banke more. Climax Blues Band is an interesting example because their two hits were years apart. Just heard another one yesterday on a Casey Kasem repeat: Silver Convention, with "Fly, Robin, Fly" and "Get Up and Boogie" (this is the one Casey played, and I always forget about it). When I looked them up, it was kind of interesting that "FRF" got up to #1 and "GUAB" got up to #2. (They had some more hits if you count Dance Chart or other countries.)

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    6. So many great tunes. Many I have never heard of. "Silver Convention"? I know the tunes and not the band.
      Taj Mahal interview today.
      "Jazz gives you back your mind. Regae gives you back your body , but the blues gives you back your soul."
      I saw Taj at Western Washington in the early 70'S.

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    7. Thanks, PS. I have often wondered why no one ever really mentions the "two-hit wonders". If you can get two memorable songs in your whole career, surely that's as good as(if not better than)having just the one. Must make it just a little easier when you're performing in concert. Not everyone will be screaming for you to do the one. They'll actually have a choice!
      pjbAlmostForgotAboutSilverConvention,Though([BTW]PurposefullyDidNotIncludeGaryWright,BecauseI'veRecentlyDiscoveredHeHadAThirdSongIn1981,FiveYearsAfter"DreamWeaver"And"LoveIsAlive"!)

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    8. One more two-hit wonder:
      Robbie Dupree, with "Steal Away" and "Hot Rod Hearts".
      pjbWouldLikeToPointOutThatTheYachtRockChannelFromMusicChoiceOnHisCableSystemHasOccasionallyPlayedAThirdSongByMr.Dupree,ButHeCan'tQuiteRememberTheTitle(AndHe'sNeverHeardItAnywhereElse,SoHeStillOnlyRegardsMr.DupreeAsATwo-HitWonder)

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  10. BTW "Connections" should NEVER EVER have all the answers be two words again! I just tried, and failed miserably. Why must we have to figure out how a bunch of two-word phrases are associated? "Strands" was much, much(it bears putting it three times here, believe me)much easier. "And that's all I have to say about that."
    pjbWillDoAFew[NYT]PuzzlesOnTheirSite,ButHeWon'tAlwaysEnjoyIt,Obviously!

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    Replies
    1. For once, I actually KNOW wha tyou are talking about, pjb! I only discovered Connections a few months ago (after having done NYT's Wordle for a long time; I didn't actually think that any other of their puzzles WERE accessible if one were not a subscriber....so I was most surprised when the Spelling Bee, then Connections and Strands WERE reachable!

      I completely agree with you about the LOOOONG phrases that constituted today's/last night's Connections. I took one look and was overwhelmed, and went for the hints (Word Tips is the best set of hints, I think...they don't give them away right off the bat.). I actually believe I have managed to do Connections only about three times WITHOUT any hints at all.

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    2. I do Connections and Strands, but not Wordle. I tried Wordle twice, and I could see that I'd never have a long streak. I have a hard time with rejection and failure, and if it looks like if I'll fail at something, most of the time I won't even try.

      Connections is right up my alley. It seems to fit how my brain works, although I do struggle with a few topics. I rarely use hints.

      TortieWhoJustGotThePurpleFirstOnToday'sConnections

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    3. That's interesting, Tortie. I have an easier time with Wordle than Connections. My best streak in Wordle is 178, but in Connections, only 94.

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    4. I'm up to 601 on Connections! It would be more, but I forgot to do it one day. I'm paranoid / OCD about forgetting again.

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    5. That's truly amazing, Tortie! I got to 420 on a non-NYT wordle site, but can't imagine 600 in a row on anything.

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    6. I'm happy with my Connections streak, but I don't know if I'd go as far as the people in this article.

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    7. Wow, that's intense all right!

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  11. Schpuzzle: BILLOWY CHINTZ (each word contains letters in alphabetical order)
    App:
    Three Dog Night - One
    Sonny Boy Williamson - Decoration Day Blues No. 2
    B. B. King - 3 O’Clock Blues
    Nina Simone - Four Women
    Freddie King - Five Long Years
    David Bowie - Five Years / Seven
    The White Stripes - Seven Nation Army
    Dusty Springfield - I Close My Eyes and Count to Ten / Just One Smile
    Merle Travis - Sixteen Tons / Three Times Seven / Nine Pound Hammer
    Bobby Bland - 24 Hours a Day

    I found two songs called “Six Days on the Road” and “Eight Days on the Road” but I can’t find that any of the above artists recorded either one.

    Hors d’Oeuvre: STEPSIS, SEPSIS, PEPSIS
    Slice: PARROTS, KEAS, CARROTS, PEAs
    Entrees:
    1. UP IN THE CATBIRD SEAT, PARADISE, CUBIT, TENTH
    2. (Post hint: ) ORANGE MARMALADE, REAGAN MELODRAMA
    3. (Post hint: ) EGGS BENEDICT, INSECT BEGGED
    4. (Post hint: ) CREAM CHEESE, EMCEE SEARCH
    5. (Post hint: ) EXPENSE REDUCTION, INDECENT EXPOSURE (some bad ways of EXPENSE REDUCTION - eliminate DONUT EXPERIENCES (Toony the Tuna from Toon in with Me would not like this!) and CONE EXPENDITURES, for ice cream lovers)
    6. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, CIA AIRLIFTING CLIENTELE
    7. RUPERT MURDOCH, DUROCHER, TRUMP
    8. BET, TUT, RUE; TUB, TUB, TEE, RUT; BUTTE, TRUE; ET TU, BRUTE?
    Dessert: Take the spelled out version of the first number. Remove the number of letters specified by second number. Get the Roman numeral equivalent of third number. (e.g., FIVE - take away 2 letters - get FOUR (IV), take TWELVE, remove 4 letters, get FIFTY-FIVE ( LV).)

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  12. SCHPUZZLE – “BILLOWY” AND “CHINTZ” – LETTERS ARE IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER
    APPETIZER – Three Dog Night, “ONE”; Bobby Bland, “TWO STEPS FROM THE BLUES”; Merle Travis, “THREE TIMES SEVEN”; Nina Simone, “FOUR WOMEN”; Freddie King, “FIVE LONG YEARS”; B.B. King, “SIX SILVER STRINGS”; White Stripes, “SEVEN NATION ARMY”; David Bowie, “EIGHT LINE POEM”; Sonny Boy Williamson, “NINE BELOW ZERO”; Dusty Springfield, “I CLOSE MY EYES AND COUNT TO TEN.” The final song could be doubly relevant because it deals with counting to ten, although the third and ninth songs each have two numbers in the title so they might be doubly relevant too.
    HORS D’OEUVRE – STEP-SIS, SEPSIS,
    SLICE – PARROT, KEA; CARROT, PEA
    ENTREES
    1. “UP IN THE CATBIRD SEAT”; PARADISE, CUBIT, TENTH
    2. ORANGE MARMALADE, REAGAN MELODRAMA
    3. EGGS BENEDICT, INSECT BEGGED
    4. CREAM CHEESE, EMCEE SEARCH
    5. EXPENSE REDUCTION, INDECENT EXPOSURE
    6. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, AIRLIFTING CIA CLIENTELE
    7. RUPERT MURDOCH, (LEO) DUROCHER, (DONALD) TRUMP
    8. ET TU, BRUTE?
    DESSERT – 1. FIVE minus two letters = IV; 2. SIX minus one letter = IX; 3. SEVEN minus four letters = V; 4. EIGHT minus four letters = I; 5. ELEVEN minus five letters = V; 6. TWELVE minus four letters = LV

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  13. Answer key– Based on numbers one to nine in song titles.
    1.Three Dog Night - “One “
    2.Bobby Bland “”Two steps from the Blues”
    3.B.B. King-” Three o’Clock blues”
    4.Nina Simone “Four women”
    5.David Bowie “Five Years”
    6.Merle Travis “Six days on the road” recorded on 4CD retrospective 62”-94” “Down Every road”
    7.The White Stripes “ Seven days in Paradise”
    8.Freddie King” Eight days on the road.”
    9.Sonny Boy Williamson- “Nine below Zero” * Special import with two numbers in the title.


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    Replies
    1. Lots of great alternates too. Only song I actually knew is Three dog night." One.

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    2. Since I have never heard of ANY of those 9 songs, Plantie, it would have been more than pointless for me to have attempted your puzzles! I see the two "on the road" songs in the list above, however.

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    3. Never heard of "Three dog night?"

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  14. HORS D’O: STEPSIS => SEPSIS => PEPSIS. [I LOATHE Pepsi, but don’t drink any sodas at all anymore…since they are, sadly, toxic to our health.]

    SLICE: PARROTS & KEAS => CARROTS and PEAS; Colors: orange & green

    ENTREES:

    1. UP IN THE CATBIRD SEAT => PARADISE / CUBIT / TENTH

    2. ORANGE(?) MARMALADE => ONAGER(?) MELODRAMA;

    3. EGGS BENEDICT => BEGGED INSECT. [Post one hint]

    4. CREAM CHEESE => EMCEE SEARCH. [Post two hints]

    5. LARGER PROFITS => GIRL FOREPARTS?

    6. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE => AIRLIFTING CIA CLIENTELE [Post two hints]

    7. RUPERT MURDOCK => DUROCHER & TRUMP [ Pre hints]

    8. TUTU BERET => BET, TUT, RUE or TUB, TEE, RUT or BUTTE, TRUE or ET TU, BRUTE?

    DESSERT: 1. FIVE minus F/E (two letters) = IV;
    2. SIX. minus S (one letter) = IX;
    3. SEVEN minus SE/EN (four letters) = V;
    4. EIGHT minus E/GHT (four letters) = I;
    5. ELEVEN minus ELE/EN (five letters) = V;
    6. TWELVE minus TWE/E (four letters) = LV

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    1. Ohhhhh,.....I misconstrued Tortie's kind attempt to help me on the Schpuzzle (the 'Stu' clue) to mean that the words had had to have CONSECUTIVE in-order status...and I could find no such things in the couplet. Never occurred to me to look for ONLY 'in order' letters without their being consecutive. But I had suspected (for no particular reason) BILLOWY and CHINTZ to probably be the desired words, but never wrote them down, since what would have been the point?

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    2. Nice alternate answer for Entree #5!

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    3. Thanks, Nodd! Somewhere it had been indicated about getting arrested or some such thing, thus I thought the girl parts might qualify!

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  15. Schpuzzle
    Both BILLOWY and CHINTZ have all their letters in alphabetical order.
    Appetizer Menu
    All song titles contain numbers. Some Puzzlerians may have found different titles for certain artists. Here they are(those that I have found)in chronological order:
    ONE(Three Dog Night)
    TWO STEPS FROM THE BLUES(Bobby Bland)
    3 O'CLOCK BLUES(B. B. KING)
    THREE TIMES SEVEN(Merle Travis)
    FOUR WOMEN(Nina Simone)
    FIVE LONG YEARS(Freddie King)
    FIVE YEARS(David Bowie)
    SEVEN NATION ARMY(The White Stripes)
    NINE BELOW ZERO(Sonny Boy Williamson---"doubly relevant"?)
    NINE POUND HAMMER(Merle Travis again)
    SIXTEEN TONS(Merle Travis yet again)
    TWENTY FOUR HOURS FROM TULSA(Dusty Springfield)
    As I said, some titles may differ depending on whose answers are posted. I also only really know the Three Dog Night song has been played more often than the rest.
    Menu
    Unclear & Conflicted Hors d'Oeuvre
    STEPSIS(stepsister), SEPSIS, PEPSIS
    Birds-Of-Wordplay Slice
    KEAS, PARROTS, PEAS AND CARROTS(Never really got any information about whether KEAS actually can be pronounced with just one syllable, though. I mostly just found it pronounced as two syllables.)
    Entrees
    1. UP IN THE CATBIRD SEAT= PARADISE, CUBIT, TENTH
    2. ORANGE MARMALADE=REAGAN MELODRAMA
    3. EGGS BENEDICT=INSECT BEGGED
    4. CREAM CHEESE=EMCEE SEARCH
    5. EXPENSE REDUCTION=INDECENT EXPOSURE
    6. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE=AIRLIFTING CIA CLIENTELE
    7. RUPERT MURDOCH=(Leo)DUROCHER, (Donald)TRUMP
    8. TUTU BERET=BET, TUT, RUE; TUB, TEE, RUT; BUTTE, TRUE; ET TU BRUTE?
    "Just sum screwy math...what's the difference?" Dessert
    Each spelled out number includes letters that are also Roman numerals. What must be subtracted are the remaining letters that are not Roman numerals.
    1. FIVE-TWO=IV(four)
    2. SIX-ONE=IX(nine)
    3. SEVEN-FOUR=V(five)
    4.:EIGHT-FOUR=I(one)
    5. ELEVEN-FIVE=V(five)
    6. TWELVE-FOUR=LV(fifty-five)
    And now, a closing joke:
    During the Christmas season, a man goes to a restaurant for breakfast and orders eggs benedict. After a few minutes, the waitress brings it to him, but it's served on a hubcap, of all things. The man asks the waitress, "Why did you put my eggs benedict on a hubcap?" The waitress then starts to sing: "Oh, there's no plate like chrome for the hollandaise..."
    I'll show myself out...-pjb




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  16. This week's official answers for the record, Part 1:
    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Just a couple o’ words in a couplet

    Breezes toss and tickle rippling prints and tints,
    Making taut the “sails” of clothes-pinned billowy chintz.
    Within that couplet thou shalt find a pair
    Of words that both a rare distinction share.
    So (“unpoetically” now!) what unusual property do a couple of words in that couplet share?
    Answer:
    The letters in "billowy" and "chintz," in order, are also in alphabetical order.
    AND (2 instances)
    BILLOWY
    BREEZES
    CHINTZ
    CLOTHES
    MAKING
    OF
    PAIR
    PINNED
    PRINTS
    RIPPLING
    SAILS
    TAUT
    THE
    TICKLE
    TINTS
    TOSS

    Lego...

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  17. This week's official answers for the record, Part 2:
    Appetizer Menu
    Delightful Puzzley “Discophilia” Appetizer:
    “Order! Order! in the Countdown Court!
    (by Plantsmith!)


    The list below – if we base it on certain song titles associated with the artists – is out of order.
    Can you put them in a more logical and “numerically fitting” order?
    On what did you base that order?
    What song titles did you use?
    Which song title was “doubly relevant”?
    1. David Bowie
    2. The White Stripes
    3. Bobby Bland
    4. Three Dog Night
    5. Freddie King
    6. Sonny Boy Williams
    7. Nina Simone
    8. Dusty Springfield
    9. B.B. King
    10. Merle Travis

    ANSWER:
    The "correct order" (based on NUMBERS that appear in song titles) is:
    1. Three Dog Night - “One “
    2. Bobby Bland “Two steps from the Blues”
    3. B.B. King-” Three o’Clock blues”
    4. Nina Simone “Four women”
    5. David Bowie “Five Years”
    6. Merle Travis “Six days on the road”
    7. The White Stripes “Seven days in Paradise”
    8. Freddie King “Eight days on the road.”
    9. Sonny Boy Williams: “Nine below Zero” * Special import with two numbers in the title.
    10. Dusty Springfield: “I Close My Eyes and Count to Ten”
    Note: Sonny Boy Williams' “Nine below Zero” is a Special import with two numbers in the title.
    Lego...

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  18. This week's official answers for the record, Part 3:

    MENU
    Unclear & Conflicted Hors d’Oeuvre:
    A Nuclear (Family) Threat?

    Name an informal term for a member of the nuclear family.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_family
    Remove one of its letters to name a potentially life-threatening response triggered by the human immune system...
    (Well, that’s kind of a downer... but consider this: If you replace a letter of that life-threatening response with a P, the result will be things that are enjoyable and refreshing!
    What are this informal family-member term, life-threatening response, and things that are enjoyable and refreshing?
    Answer:
    Stepsis; Sepsis; "Pepsis" (Pepsi-Cola soft drinks)

    Birds-Of-Wordprey Slice:
    Two words... for the same bird

    Switch the initial sounds of two words:
    ~ some two-syllable colorful tropical birds and...
    ~ some one-syllable “Down-Under” mountain-dwelling endangered species of those same birds.
    The result sounds like two foods that are often served together as a side dish. The colors of these foods share four common letters.
    What are these two birds and two foods?
    Answer:
    Parrots & Keas; Carrots & Peas
    KEA is a large olive green omnivorous parrot (Nestor notabilis) of New Zealand that is typically found in Alpine regions.

    Riffing Off Shortz Slices:
    “Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex”

    Will Shortz’s June 7th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle reads:
    Rearrange the letters of “NECESSARY MISPRINT” to spell a familiar phrase.

    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz Slices read:
    ENTREE #1
    Name an American idiomatic phrase that means "being in an enviable, highly advantageous, or superior position," in five words of 2, 2, 3, 7 and 4 letters. Rearrange these 18 letters to spell three words associated with the Bible:
    ~ a synonym of Eden,
    ~ a unit of Ark measurement, and
    ~ the ordinal number of the commandment that proscribes coveting.
    What are this phrase and three biblical words?
    Answer:
    "Up in the catbird seat"; Paradise, Cubit, Tenth

    Lego...

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  19. This week's official answers for the record, Part 4:
    (Note: Entrees #2 throught #7 were created by our riffmaster-extraordinaire, Nodd.)
    ENTREE #2
    You can rearrange the letters in a two-word food item you might have on your breakfast table to spell a two-word description of the 1942 film “Kings Row.” What are the item and the description?
    Answer:
    ORANGE MARMALADE; REAGAN MELODRAMA

    ENTREE #3
    You can rearrange the letters in another two-word food item you might have on your breakfast table to spell a two-word description of what happened when the cold, hungry grasshopper implored the ants to let him into their shelter in the 1934 Disney film “The Grasshopper and the Ants.” What are the item and the description?
    Answer:
    EGGS BENEDICT; INSECT BEGGED

    ENTREE #4
    You can rearrange the letters in a third two-word food item you might have on your breakfast table to spell, in two words, what the producers of “Jeopardy!” undertook after Alex Trebek passed away. What is the item and what did the producers undertake?
    Answer:
    CREAM CHEESE; EMCEE SEARCH

    ENTREE #5
    Name a two-word phrase for something businesses are typically trying to achieve. Rearrange its letters to get a two-word phrase for something that might get you arrested. What are the two phrases?
    Answer:
    EXPENSE REDUCTION; INDECENT EXPOSURE

    ENTREE #6
    Rearrange the letters of a two-word subject currently in the news to get a phrase describing, in two words and one initialism, what the U.S. Air Force would be doing if they were charged with evacuating the customers of a U.S. espionage organization from a foreign country. What are the subject and the phrase?
    Answer:
    ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE; AIRLIFTING CIA CLIENTELE

    ENTREE #7
    Rearrange the letters in the first and last names of a controversial business magnate to get the last names of a controversial baseball manager of the past and a controversial current head of state. Who are these three persons?
    RUPERT MURDOCH; LEO DUROCHER, DONALD TRUMP

    ENTREE #8
    If you rearrange the letters of TUTU and BERET (see image) you can spell three words: a wager, the name of a boy king, and a synonym of the verb “regret.”
    Or, you can spell a whirlpool site, dimpled-sphere-prop and divot.
    Or, You can spell two words: a montana city and a synonym of “factual and accurate.”
    Or...
    you can spell a familiar phrase.
    What is this phrase?
    Answer:
    Et tu Brute?
    TuTu; Beret

    Dessert Menu
    “Just sum screwy math... what’s the difference?” Dessert:
    “It just don’t seem to add up... or subtract down!”


    Explain how the six equations below might possibly be true:
    1. Five minus two equals four.
    2. Six minus one equals nine.
    3. Seven minus four equals five.
    4. Eight minus four equals one.
    5. Nine minus three equals one.
    6. Twelve minus four equals fifty-five.

    Answer:
    Answer:
    1. Five minus two letters (f and e) leaves the Roman numeral iv, or four.
    2. Six minus one letter (s) leaves the Roman numeral ix, or nine.
    3. Seven minus four letters (s,e,e and n) leaves the Roman numeral v, or five.
    4. Eight minus four letters (e, g, h and t) leaves the Roman numeral i, or one.
    5. Eleven minus five letters (e, l, e, e and n) leaves the Roman numeral v, or five.
    6. Twelve minus four letters (t,w,e and e) leaves the Roman numeral lv, or fifty-five.

    Lego!

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