tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post5927463512487430818..comments2024-03-27T19:58:14.682-07:00Comments on Joseph Young's Puzzleria!: Pouring “t” into Proper Porcelain; Three coins... and a’countin’; Patrick Berry’s Celebrity “Webitry” Auld Lang Lullabyin’; Frequent contractions lead to new life;legolambdahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comBlogger35125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-70441514489413227082019-01-02T19:05:48.887-08:002019-01-02T19:05:48.887-08:00This week's answers for the record, part 3:
RO...This week's answers for the record, part 3:<br />ROSS (continued):<br /><br />ENTREE #5:<br />Think of a place you might find coins, in two words. Rearrange the ten combined letters in these two words and you’ll get a synonym of “receive” and the past tense of another synonym of “receive.” <br />What place is this? What are these synonyms?<br />Answer:<br />Coat pocket; Accept, took (past tense of "take")<br />ENTREE #6: <br />Think of a place you can find coins, in two words. Switch the first two letters of the first word with the first two letters of the second word. You’ll get two adjectives, each which describes the apparel pictured in the images here. <br />What is this place coins are found? What are these two adjectives?<br />Answer:<br />Piggy bank; baggy, pink<br />ENTREE #7:<br />Think of a place you can find coins. It consists of two nouns, the first one possessive. Remove some COINS from this place... you may hate to do this, you might need to buy something. Also remove a 4-letter word for what you need to know so you know how many coins to remove to buy what you want to buy. <br />Now, add a coin-shaped letter (and the letter preceding it in the alphabet) to the remaining letters of the place where you can find coins. Put the second word first, and you’ll get a two-word phrase, in 10 and 5 letters, describing what many people around the world were engaged in during New Year’s Eve 19 years ago. What is this place you can find coins? In what were many people engaged 19 years ago?<br />Answer:<br />Numismatist's collection; Millennial toast<br />NUMISMATIST'S COLLECTION - (COINS + COST) + (O+N) = <br />NUMMAITSLLECTIN = UMISMATLLETINO --> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9iOVJ72DQ8" rel="nofollow">MILLENNIUM</a> <a rel="nofollow">TOAST</a><br />ENTREE #8:<br />Think of a container where you can find coins, in two words of six and four letters. This container is sometimes placed on a downtown sidewalk. The primary function of this container is transporting an object with strings attached. Rearrange the combined letters of the words of the container to name, in two words of four and six letters, what the container becomes when its owner closes and totes it after an extremely profitable day – indeed, so profitable that the container is so full of money that there is no longer any room in the container to put the object with strings attached! <br />What is this container, and what does it sometimes become?<br />Answer:<br /><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWjCG7572SI" rel="nofollow">Violin case</a>; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWjCG7572SI" rel="nofollow">Coin valise</a> (see 00:23)<br /><br />ENTREE #9:<br />Think of a place you can find coins, in three words. Rearrange the 13 combined letters of the three words to form a two-word term for male mail carriers who, like the fictional Cliff Clavin, sometimes engage in silly or foolish behavior. The two-word phrase consits of a a 6-letter noun used as a modifyer and a 7-letter noun. <br />What is this place coins can be found? What is the two-word term for these silly mail carriers?<br />Answer:<br /><a href="https://www.usmint.gov/about/mint-tours-facilities/west-point" rel="nofollow">West Point Mint</a>; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=botdmsQilnU" rel="nofollow">Nitwit</a> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZag1zlecGI&list=PL_6pLXoVayONVqSHuTL0wZZdTliJl42aF" rel="nofollow">postmen</a>;<br /><br /><br />Dessert Menu<br /><br />Dream Of The New Dessert:<br />Auld Lang Lullabying<br />“Hush now, my darlings, drift to sleep...<br />Make murmurs, coos, but not _ ____.”<br />Solve for the missing words (of one and four letters) in the above lullabye that parents might sing to their young’uns. Move each of the five letters the same number of places ahead in the alphabet to form five different letters. Capitalize all five and rearrange them to form something soon-to-be timely. What is it?<br />Answer: MMXIX, the Roman numerals for 2019, the imminent New Year;<br />“Hush now, my dear, pray drift to sleep...<br />Make dreamy murmurs, not A PEEP.”<br />A PEEP --> I XMMX (moving 8 letters ahead)s --> MMXIX<br /><br />Lego!legolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-24390362531223203772019-01-02T19:04:36.208-08:002019-01-02T19:04:36.208-08:00This week's answers for the record, part 2:
M...This week's answers for the record, part 2:<br /><br />MENU<br /><br />Have A Spot Of Alphabet Soup Slice<br />Pouring “t” into proper porcelain<br /><br />Name a proper noun closely associated with a certain profession. Alphabetize the letters of this noun and change the capital letter of the noun to lowercase. Add a “t” somewhere within this result to name members of this profession. <br />Who are these professionals?<br />Hint: Placing the “t” within the result disrupted the perfect alphabetical order of that result. The alphabetical order would have remained intact had the “t” been added at the end.<br />Answer:<br />Actors (Oscar => acors + t = actors<br /><br />Riffing Off Shortz Slices:<br />Three coins... and a’countin’<br />Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz Slices read:<br />ENTREE #1:<br />Think of a place you can find coins, in two words of four and five letters, as depicted by the image here. Put the second word first, and you’ll get a compound word describing many holiday cards. What words are these?<br />Answer:<br />"Felt heart"; <br />ENTREE #2:<br />Think of a place you can find coins, in two words. Double the first letter of the first word. Put the second word first and place a space between the doubled letters. You’ll get a part of a piece of game equipment that caused the game to be banned in Canada and the United States.word describing most holiday cards. What words are these?<br />Answer:<br />Tip jar; <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawn_darts" rel="nofollow">Jart</a> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdoHGrCmskc" rel="nofollow">tip</a><br />ENTREE #3:<br />Think of a place you can find coins, in two words. Rearrange the letters in the words to describe, in two words, certain Senators in 1968. Where can you find coins and what is the description of Senators?<br />Answer:<br />Cash Register; Tiger Chasers <br />The <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=algLkMYocPI" rel="nofollow">Detroit Tigers</a> won the <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p8PJpCkuU9s" rel="nofollow">1968 American League Pennant</a> with a record of 103 wins and 59 losses. The Washinton Senators, who finished the 1968 season with 65 wins and 96 losses, were chasing the Tigers all summer long. Other Tiger chasers were the Baltimore Orioles (91-71), Cleveland Indians (86-75), Boston Red Sox (86-76), New York Yankees (83-79), Oakland Athletics (82-80), Minnesota Twins (79-83), California Angels (67-95) and Chicago White Sox, (67-95). <br />ENTREE #4:<br />Think of a place you can find a flippable coin, in two words. Remove an apostrophe from the first word and put the second word first. <br />You’ll get the names handbooks, in two words. This handbook has been called “the oracle of all things do-it-yourself.” <br />What place is this? What are these handbooks titled?<br />Answer:<br /><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Gsdr60Qyr4" rel="nofollow">Ref's pocket</a>; <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocket_Ref" rel="nofollow">"Pocket</a> <a href="https://www.buildersbook.com/pocket-refs-truck-books.html" rel="nofollow">Ref(s)"</a><br /><br />Lego...legolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-26000412432580221822019-01-02T19:03:32.294-08:002019-01-02T19:03:32.294-08:00This week's answers for the record, part 1:
S...This week's answers for the record, part 1:<br /><br />Schpuzzle Of The Week:<br />Frequent contractions lead to new life<br />Name a food that reputedly promotes longevity of life, in 8 letters. Divide the word in two and place a frequently used contraction (without the apostrophe) before the second part to form a phrase associated with the beginning of life. What are this word and this phrase?<br />Answer: <br /><a href="https://www.early-pregnancy-tests.com/implant" rel="nofollow">eggplant</a>; >> <a href="https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/in-vitro-fertilization/about/pac-20384716" rel="nofollow">egg (im)+plant</a><br /><br />Appetizer Menu<br /><br />“All Righty, Then!” Appetizer<br />Patrick Berry’s Celebrity “Webitry”<br />Can you unravel the “web of celebrity,” below, spun by master puzzle-weaver Patrick J. Berry?<br />The creator of decades-old children’s “edutainment” franchise shares a last name with an award-winning actress. <br />The first name of this creator’s long-time “right-hand man” (let’s call him “Righty”) is the middle name of a well-known children’s author. Righty’s last name is the last word in the title of a celebrated book by this author.<br />Righty, who is also a director and actor, provided the voice for a wise character in a successful movie franchise. The aforementioned award-winning actress stars as a character in a current television series. The title of her series is the last word in the title of the movie in which Righty’s character first appeared. The first name of her character is the first word of a two-word character portrayed by Righty. The last name of the actress’s character, when pronounced out loud, is the second word of a two-word character in the book by the aforementioned children’s author. This character was portrayed in a movie version of the book by an actor who shares a first name with another of Righty’s characters. Righty also played a character whose first name begins with Righty’s first name initial plus his last name.<br />1. Who is “Righty”? <br />2. Who are the the actress and the children’s “edutainment” franchise creator who share a last name?<br />3. Who is the children’s author, and what is that author’s celebrated book? <br />4. What are the actress’s TV series and her character’s name? <br />5. In what movie did Righty’s wise character first appear?<br />6. Who is the character in a movie version of the author’s celebrated book, and who portrayed that character? <br />7. What are the names of characters that Righty portrayed?<br /><br />Answers:<br />1. Who is “Righty”? <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ke1gnQL14ng" rel="nofollow">FRANK OZ</a><br />2. Who are the the actress and the children’s “edutainment” franchise creator who share a last name? <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1ATPzraWn4" rel="nofollow">TARAJI P. HENSON</a>; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIlvWhafJFo" rel="nofollow">JIM HENSON</a><br />3. Who is the children’s author, and what is that author’s celebrated book? <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iloZ-btzTMU" rel="nofollow">L. (LYMAN) FRANK BAUM</a>; <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iyg0sBc_UWg" rel="nofollow">THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ</a><br />4. What are the actress’s TV series and her character’s name? <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRLoQNT4uNA" rel="nofollow">EMPIRE; COOKIE LYON</a><br />5. In what movie did Righty’s wise character first appear? <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gw8jQ5VQuec" rel="nofollow">"STAR WARS: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK"</a><br />6. Who is the character in a movie version of the author’s celebrated book, and who portrayed that character? <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ak3J5DayiCk" rel="nofollow">COWARDLY LION; BERT LAHR</a><br />7. What are the names of characters that Righty portrayed? YODA (in the "Star Wars" franchise; and Muppets/Sesame Street characters: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BovQyphS8kA" rel="nofollow">COOKIE MONSTER</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVLCXtG5HZ8" rel="nofollow">BERT</a> and <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eH2coWVi9Vg" rel="nofollow">FOZZIE BEAR</a><br /><br />Lego...legolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-72046387678233848562019-01-02T18:41:01.008-08:002019-01-02T18:41:01.008-08:00...What Violin Teddy said.
LegoWhoChoosesNotToSpe......What Violin Teddy said.<br /><br />LegoWhoChoosesNotToSpeakForHimselfWhenSpeakersWhoSpeakBetterThanHeHaveSpokenlegolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-45591417490046173222019-01-02T18:22:28.745-08:002019-01-02T18:22:28.745-08:00Happy New Year to all, BTW!Happy New Year to all, BTW!cranberryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15404075259072141202noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-76903288632641314722019-01-02T18:20:44.205-08:002019-01-02T18:20:44.205-08:00Schpuzzle
EGGPLANT, EGG IMPLANT
Appetizer
FRANK O...Schpuzzle <br />EGGPLANT, EGG IMPLANT<br />Appetizer<br />FRANK OZ, TARAJI P. HENSON and JIM HENSON, LYMAN FRANK BAUM, who wrote "THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ", EMPIRE, on which TARAJI plays COOKIE LYON, "STAR WARS: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK", THE COWARDLY LION, played by BERT LAHR in "THE WIZARD OF OZ", FRANK OZ played YODA, COOKIE MONSTER, BERT, and FOZZIE BEAR.<br />Menu<br />OSCAR, ACTORS<br />Entrees<br />1. FELT HEART, HEARTFELT<br />2. TIP JAR, JART TIP<br />3. CASH REGISTER, "TIGER CHASERS"<br />4. REF'S POCKET, POCKET REF<br />5. COAT POCKET, ACCEPT, TOOK<br />6. PIGGY BANK, BAGGY, PINK<br />7. NUMISMATIST'S COLLECTION-COINS and COST=MILLENNIUM TOAST<br />8. VIOLIN CASE, COIN VALISE<br />9. WEST POINT MINT, "NITWIT POSTMEN"<br />Dessert<br />"A PEEP", MMXIX(2019 in Roman numerals)<br />And no, I never thought Bert and Ernie were gay. It always seemed more like "The Odd Couple" to me.-pjbcranberryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15404075259072141202noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-77276143167199577682019-01-02T16:25:12.490-08:002019-01-02T16:25:12.490-08:00SCHPUZZLE: EGGPLANT => EGG IMPLANT
PJB'...SCHPUZZLE: EGGPLANT => EGG IMPLANT<br /><br />PJB's APPETIZER: <br /><br />1. FRANK OZ;<br /><br />2. TARAJI & JIM HENSON; <br /><br />3. L. FRANK BAUM; WIZARD OF OZ<br /><br />4. EMPIRE; COOKIE LYON <br /><br />5. THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK<br /><br />6. COWARDLY LION; BERT LAHR<br /><br />7. YODA; COOKIE MONSTER; BERT (on Sesame Street) and FOZZIE BEAR<br /><br /><br />ALPHABET SOUP SLICE: OSCAR => ACTORS <br /><br /><br />ENTREES:<br /><br />1. FELT HEART => HEARTFELT<br /><br />2. T/TIP JAR => JART TIP [ I hadn't noticed before that the puzzle said "PART of a piece of equipment", not to mention I hadn't realized that LAWN DARTS were also called JARTs.]<br /><br />3. CASH REGISTER => TIGER CHASERS<br /><br />4. REF'S POCKET => POCKET REFS [Whoever heard of this? I had had the referee part, but thought it was his HAND or FIST or PALM or something]<br /><br />5. COAT POCKET => ACCEPT & TOOK <br /><br />6. PIGGY BANK => BAGGY PINK [Pre hint, but CUTE connection!! Love Miss Piggy!]<br /><br />7. NUMISMATIST'S COLLECTION minus "COINS" & "COST" => MILLENNIUM TOAST<br /><br />8. VIOLIN CASE => COIN VALISE : o )<br /><br />9. WEST POINT MINT => NITWIT POSTMEN<br /><br />DESSERT: A PEEP => I X M M X => M M X X I (the year 2021)<br />ViolinTeddyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11162884875089825084noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-86495467076448325512019-01-02T16:25:03.186-08:002019-01-02T16:25:03.186-08:00Glad to see your replies above, Paul...I had wonde...Glad to see your replies above, Paul...I had wondered WHERE you had gone this week!ViolinTeddyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11162884875089825084noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-75691436460818723472019-01-02T12:24:00.818-08:002019-01-02T12:24:00.818-08:00Before the hints:
A PEEP > MMXIX
VIOLIN CASE &...Before the hints:<br />A PEEP > MMXIX<br /><br />VIOLIN CASE > COIN VALISE<br /><br />After the hints:<br />FELT HEART > HEARTFELT<br /><br />TIP JAR > JART TIP<br /><br />CASH REGISTER > TIGER CHASERS<br /><br />WEST POINT MINT > NITWIT POSTMEN<br /><br />EGGPLANT > EGG IMPLANTPaulhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11114786604125384958noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-9343300187852257872019-01-01T23:59:44.992-08:002019-01-01T23:59:44.992-08:00Finally! Now I can go to bed! See y'all later ...Finally! Now I can go to bed! See y'all later today!cranberryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15404075259072141202noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-51311798885166614052019-01-01T22:56:03.421-08:002019-01-01T22:56:03.421-08:00Schpuzzle:
Fertility clinics, but not necessarily....Schpuzzle:<br />Fertility clinics, but not necessarily. <br />Prince (or the "Purple One" as we call him in Minnesota) was probably fond of the color of the food.<br />Entree #3: The first word of the place you can find coins is the 4-letter surname of a hitter named Norm who once wore the uniform of the team everybody was in pursuit of. The second word is what virtually all professional ballplayers did in the early-to-mid-1940's, vis-a-vis the draft. And most served. Greatest Generation, and all that.<br />Norm, and each of his teammates, were what everyone was in hot pursuit of.<br />ENTREE #9:<br />The place you can find coins, in three words, is a specific place in New York State. It makes polished soldiers and shiny, happy minty-fresh inedible "wafers." <br />What about the two-word term for male mail carriers that consists of a a 6-letter noun used as a modifier and a 7-letter noun? <br />The modifier consists of two small rhyming words.<br />The Carpenters, Marvelettes and Fab Four sang about the singular form of the synonym of male mail carriers. <br /><br />LegoSettingAnAllTimeHighHintRecord!legolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-22963894084881974972019-01-01T21:23:36.703-08:002019-01-01T21:23:36.703-08:00Just got #4! Still need the Schpuzzle, and Entrees...Just got #4! Still need the Schpuzzle, and Entrees #3 and #9, though. I have an operative word for #9, but can't figure out the anagram. I have the seven-letter word, but not the six-letter word. In short, I have a four-letter word for where you might find the coins, but not the specific one. And I've gone through a whole list of them, too. And I'm not quite sure about #3, either.cranberryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15404075259072141202noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-90956447433488354112019-01-01T21:15:03.794-08:002019-01-01T21:15:03.794-08:00Alrighty, many thanks again for those latest, Lego...Alrighty, many thanks again for those latest, Lego....the answers finally got through my thick skull! One problem I was DEFINITELY having was 'thinking female' in terms of where coins might reside! And in the other case, forgetting where coins USED to live pre-computers!ViolinTeddyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11162884875089825084noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-48290535784489810762019-01-01T20:02:27.125-08:002019-01-01T20:02:27.125-08:00Two more Hints:
ROSS:
ENTREE #3:
Wail till you hea...Two more Hints:<br />ROSS:<br />ENTREE #3:<br />Wail till you hear the ding. Them make some change.<br />You've heard of the tortoise and the hare? Well, this was another word that begins with T... and the rest of the field. Except that this time the field was in the rear-view mirror from the start of the race. <em>They</em> didn't even have to take a roadside rest in order to lose!<br />ENTREE #5:<br />The past-tense verb rhymes with "shook." <br />This "place you might find coins" is something you wear and stick your hand into when you need to buy something.<br /><br />LegoSaysHeCanAcceptThePossibilityOfPigsInFlight...ButTheOnlyUdderlyHopelessScenarioIsThatCowsWillFly...TheAerodynamicsSimplyDoNotWorkOutlegolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-65821784039781525312019-01-01T19:30:50.751-08:002019-01-01T19:30:50.751-08:00Sure, Gregory. Welcome.
Email me at jrywriter@aol....Sure, Gregory. Welcome.<br />Email me at jrywriter@aol.com<br />Thanks.<br /><br />LegoAkaJosephYounglegolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-50275142343340692612019-01-01T19:24:01.028-08:002019-01-01T19:24:01.028-08:00cranberry, try putting "Tom Glover" and ...cranberry, try putting "Tom Glover" and "handbook" in a search engine.<br /><br />LegoNotesThatTomGloverWouldBeAGreatNameForASlickFieldingShortstoplegolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-72032273144276102902019-01-01T18:51:38.935-08:002019-01-01T18:51:38.935-08:00It is utterly hopeless on 3 and 5. I give up.It is utterly hopeless on 3 and 5. I give up.ViolinTeddyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11162884875089825084noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-63614836343734580642019-01-01T18:42:53.783-08:002019-01-01T18:42:53.783-08:00Is there a way to contact the person who runs this...Is there a way to contact the person who runs this blog? Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04274141508300059427noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-78234850094520013412019-01-01T18:03:29.897-08:002019-01-01T18:03:29.897-08:00Just solved both Entree #2 and 4. Only now that I...Just solved both Entree #2 and 4. Only now that I know #4"s answer ,can I find the "oracle of all things DIY"...it surely never showed up in GOogle before. <br /><br />Will have additional comments on each in my answers tomorrow. On to #3 and 5.ViolinTeddyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11162884875089825084noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-3987267835846034812019-01-01T17:48:36.147-08:002019-01-01T17:48:36.147-08:00Hurrah, your Schpuzzle hint allowed me to solve it...Hurrah, your Schpuzzle hint allowed me to solve it quickly. Thank you.<br /><br />I haven't read the other new hints yet, but will hold out hope! : O )ViolinTeddyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11162884875089825084noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-69532617432528434602019-01-01T17:42:44.264-08:002019-01-01T17:42:44.264-08:00What does Tom Glover have to do with the diy handb...What does Tom Glover have to do with the diy handbook?cranberryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15404075259072141202noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-6908419248977780762019-01-01T16:12:19.554-08:002019-01-01T16:12:19.554-08:00The first name of the guy named Glover is the same...The first name of the guy named Glover is the same name as the guy who lusted after chocolates in the Dessert.<br /><br />LegoWhoHasNoDoubtlegolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-10837034297377606462019-01-01T15:02:29.903-08:002019-01-01T15:02:29.903-08:00Got the Academic puzzle, but still can't figur...Got the Academic puzzle, but still can't figure out the rest. Googling Glover gets you to Donald mostly. Did find a plumbing company, a wrecking company, and a towing company based in AL, though. Nothing helped.cranberryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15404075259072141202noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-41667008388762763612019-01-01T09:42:41.693-08:002019-01-01T09:42:41.693-08:002019 Hints:
SOTW:
The food that reputedly promote...2019 Hints:<br /><br />SOTW:<br />The food that reputedly promotes longevity of life begins with a really common vowel. Prince probably ate it, but alas...<br /><br />ARTA:<br />Ali Baba<br /><br />HASOASS:<br />This is kind of an <b>A</b>cademic puzzle... One that a grouchy guy from Patrick's ARTA puzzle would easily solve.<br /><br />ROSS:<br />ENTREE #2:<br />Revisit the autobiographical lyrics of Billy Joel's breakthrough hit single.<br />ENTREE #3:<br />These Senators are no longer Senators. They are now Twins and Rangers. The "two words" you seek also describe certain Twins during 1968, but not certain Rangers. Rangers did not yet exist. What these Senators and Twins were doing was tryng to catch creatures not native to Africa.<br />ENTREE #4:<br />It's a DIY tool that I had never heard of before either. Google "Glover."<br />ENTREE #5:<br />the present-tense verb is sometimes confused with a 2-syllable word that begins with "ex-". The past-tense verb might be followed by "... advantage of."<br />ENTREE #6:<br />This answe also has a connection to Patrick J. Berry's ARTA puzzle. Don't Miss the connection. <br />ENTREE #7:<br />If this puzzle were about where you can find stamps in a album of sorts, the first part of the answer would be "philatelist's". <br />ENTREE #9:<br />"<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MwJqkorGam8" rel="nofollow">These</a>" can be very refreshing.<br /><br />DOTND:<br />The "something Tom might take" was likely furtive. Tom probably also lusted after Godiva chocolates.<br /><br />LegoWhoResolveToBeABetterHinterIn2019legolambdahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18081014756741740081noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3930236368587920355.post-65086206701197939462019-01-01T05:13:36.768-08:002019-01-01T05:13:36.768-08:00I guess I'll put in my two cents' worth: ...I guess I'll put in my two cents' worth: 12 hours ago or so, the clues allowed me to solve Entrees 1, 7 and 9. With the 6 and 8 I already had, that leaves me with #s 2, 3, 4 and 5 undone. <br /><br />I know the banned game equipment for #2 [and its various iterations], but have been unable to go backwards and turn any of them into where coins are.<br /><br />I have ideas on #4's coin location, but can't make it turn into any sort of handbook (Google has been a complete failure here).<br /><br />I've tried NUMEROUS combos of "receive" synonyms and its past tense pairs for #5, and NOTHING goes backwards (once again) to any coin locations. <br /><br />And I'm hopelessly stuck on #3 and the baseball stuff. And the Schpuzzle....ViolinTeddyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11162884875089825084noreply@blogger.com