Friday, March 23, 2018

Starlets of stage and “synonma” Critters and their crooning cries; Zany poker face-off, pick a winner; Colonial cookware, eh?

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER (1110 + 98) SERVED
Welcome to our March 23rd edition of Joseph Young’s Puzzleria!


On our menus this week are:
ONE Cookin’ Appetizer;
ONE  Copacetic Slice;
ONE  Leading lady Dessert; and
SEVEN “Whamba bamba thank you mamba” Riff Offs.

Think Good, It’s Friday. Have fun solving!    


Appetizer Menu

World History Appetizer:
Colonial cookware, eh? 


Name a word (often preceded by “eh”) that was Regency-era (early 19th-century British) slang for “You know?” Place after this word, without a space, a term for a versatile cooking utensil. (Ancient versions of this utensil were found in Han Dynasty-era tombs. This particular term, however, was coined much more recently, around the time that Ike took office.) 


Spell this placement of word-plus-term backward to form a synonym of  “fawn” that has Oriental roots.

What is this word? 
What is this term? 
What is the synonym for “fawn” that is formed when you spell the word and term together backward?


MENU

Copacetic Slice: 
Zany poker face-off, pick a winner

Rank the following three sentences in their correct order, from best to third-best:
A: If I’ve been dealt all face cards I put on my poker face, hiding how peaceful and copacetic I really feel.
B: Thanks to social media networking I learned that many Deadheads have outworn their vinyl copies of the “Workingman’s Dead” album with its masterful picking.
C. The magician’s evening sleight-of-hand zaniness often climaxed with him pulling a jackrabbit from a hat, eliciting wholehearted applause.
There are six possible rankings: ABC, ACB, BAC, BCA, CAB, and CBA. Explain your ranking.

Riffing Off Shortz And Donabedian Slices:
Critters and their crooning cries

Will Shortz’s March 18th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, composed by Haig Donabedian, reads:
Think of a popular two-word song title in 7 letters. If you have the right one, you can rearrange the letters to name an animal and the sound it makes. What is it? Here’s a hint: The title is in a foreign language.
Puzzleria!’s Riffing Off Shortz and Donabedian Slices read:
ONE:
Think of a popular three-word song title from the 1980s, in 9 letters. If you have the right one, you can rearrange the letters to name a carnivorous marine mammal and a carnivorous mammal that has been associated with Chanel No. 5. 
What are these mammals? What is the song title? 
Here are hints: The title is in a foreign language. One of its three words is an apostrophized contraction. The two mammals alliterate.
TWO:
Think of an mammal in 3 letters, and a word sometimes used to name an interesting and unusual part of its body in 4 letters. If you have the right word, you can rearrange the letters to name a kind of bird and the sound it makes. 
What are this mammal, body part, bird and sound the bird makes?
THREE:
Think of a ruminant mammal in 3 letters and a kind of food it doesn’t eat in four letters. If you have the right ones, you can rearrange the letters to name a smaller mammal and the sound it makes. 
What is this smaller mammal and the sound it makes?
FOUR:
Think of a popular one-word song title in 9 letters. If you have the right one, you can rearrange the letters to name fragrant things that are worn, in 4 letters, and how they were made, a past-tense verb in 5 letters. 
What are these fragrant things and how were they made? 
Here’s a hint: The title is in a foreign language.
FIVE:
Think of two winged creatures: a bird of prey in 4 letters and a productive insect in 8 letters. 
If you have the right ones, you can rearrange the letters (after replacing a “b” with a “d”) to name an animal, in 6 letters and the sound it makes, in 6 letters split by a hyphen. 
What are the animal and the hyphenated sound it makes?
SIX:
Think of a popular two-word song title in 11 letters. 
If you have the right one, you can rearrange the letters to name the first word in the three-word title of a joyous Christmas carol in four letters, and a word in the lyrics of a joyous Christmas carol with a five-word title. What is the two-word song title? 
Here’s a hint: The two-word song title is in a foreign language. The word in the lyrics of  the carol with the five-word title is one of four words in the song’s chorus, which is in a foreign language.
SEVEN:
Think of a popular three-word song title in 12 letters. 
If you have the right one, you can rearrange the letters to name a plural 4-letter noun for two participants in a same-sex marriage gone wrong, and an 8-letter verb for what the Catholic church might have done to the marriage after the same-sex couple divorced... assuming the church had somehow condoned the marriage in the first place. What is the song title? Here’s a hint: The title is in a foreign language.


Dessert Menu

Lead Lady Lead Dessert:
Starlets of stage and “synonma”

Remove a man’s first name from the end of  a past actress’s first name, forming a word. 
Change the second letter of her last name to an “m” and switch it with the third letter, forming a synonym of the first word. 
Who is this actress and what are these synonyms?

Every Friday 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.

18 comments:

  1. Happy Friday everyone! I can't believe it's Friday evening and I'm the very first commenter on the blog! Where is everybody? I've even checked out the puzzles late last night, and by now I've got everything but the Menu puzzle, and Riff-Off #7. As for #6, I have to ask about the spelling in either the 11-letter title or the foreign word in the Christmas carol chorus. Did you overlook one letter? Not to give anything away, but while the song title does not have two A's(that I've found, anyway), the word in the chorus does. Unless you've found a rare variation in one or the other, I think you've made another mistake! And I must say, it's harder to find a good list of popular songs with foreign titles than you might think. #4 just came to me, without ever seeing it in the list I searched! BTW, when I reveal my answers next Wednesday, it will be from beautiful Ft. Walton Beach again! We're going there for Spring Break, and I hope I'll have time to comment Wednesday, especially because that's the day we get there. But for now, as usual, I'll expect good hints for the aforementioned puzzles I have yet to solve. See ya in FL, Lego!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Add a letter to the end of the Bambi-esque term to get what sounds like a place between Sacramento and San Francisco ... sort of.

    I have two answers for the Copacetic Slice, but I'm not sure how to hint my way around them.

    ONE: An English translation of the song title is also a song title with nine letters and an apostrophe. The nine letters of the English title can be rearranged to get some things one might eat, and something else you would probably NOT eat ... unless you're some kind of fink.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. WOT + WOK > KOWTOW
      Vacaville is a "cow town" between Sacramento and Sn Francisco
      Sentence A has four ACEs and a FIVE, so it beats sentence B, which has three KINGs and a pair of TWOs for a full house. Sentence C has a 7-J straight, which is worse than either A or B, unless "wholehearted" means it's a straight flush, in which case C wins. So, maybe it's ABC, but I'm putting my money on CAB.
      C'est La Vie > SEAL, CIVET
      That's Life > FILETS, HAT

      Delete
  3. Replies
    1. HAWK, HONEYBEE > DONKEY, HEE-HAW [Buck Owens]

      Delete
  4. THREE: Makes me think of praying insects.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. COW MEAT > CAT MEOW [The cat's meow is something like the bee's knees.]

      Delete
  5. I hope TWO isn't just an elaborate Polish joke.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. COW CRAW > CROW CAW ? [I'm not crazy about this answer, but it reminded me of Krakow, Poland]

      Delete
    2. Great stuff, Paul... Vacaville, Krakow and Cat's Meow = Bee's Knees. You really should do a puzzle blog.

      LegoTheFogCrawlsInOnLittleCat'sKnees

      Delete
  6. There's been a death in the family, and as of this moment we're not quite sure if we'll still be going to Florida. I'll keep you posted.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My condolences, Patrick. I'll keep you and your loved ones in my prayers.
      Lego

      Delete
  7. I don't generally do song title puzzles, but I have the two mammal puzzles:

    TWO: COW CRAW → CROW CAW.

    THREE:: COW MEAT → CAT MEOW.

    ReplyDelete
  8. DIdn't do so well this week:

    APPETIZER: WOT & WOK => KOWTOW

    COPACETIC SLICE: I know this is too simple an answer, but nothing else came to me: ABC (ALPHABETICAL ORDER OF THE FIRST LETTER)

    RIFF OFFS:

    1. C'EST LA VIE => SEAL & CIVET

    2. EWE?, ROE?, YAK? & HORN? => HERON? HONK?

    3. COW & MEAT => CAT & MEOW

    4. The only ONE WORD, 9-letter foreign song title I could come up with was "DOMINIQUE" but that does NOT => OILS MIXED or FUSED , the only answers I could think of.

    5. HAWK & HONEYBEE => DONKEY & HEE-HAW

    6. ??GOOD KING WENCESLAS?? & "LES ANGES DAN NOS CAMPAGNES" [The ONLY 5-letter Xmas carol with a foreign-language chorus, GLoria In Excelsis Deo, that I could think of; however, in English, it's a six letter title = STUCK]

    7. EXES???? ABROGATE / DISSOLVE????

    DESSERT: ???

    ReplyDelete
  9. Appetizer
    WOT, WOK, KOWTOW
    Riff-Offs
    1. C'EST LA VIE, SEAL, CIVET
    2. COW, CRAW, CROW, CAW
    3. COW, MEAT, CAT, MEOW
    4. EDELWEISS, LEIS, SEWED
    5. HAWK, HONEYBEE, DONKEY, HEE-HAW 6.DANKE SCHOEN, DECK, HOSANNA
    Dessert
    BETTY GRABLE, BET, GAMBLE
    My Aunt Jeanie's funeral will be next week. We're here in FL until Saturday.-pjb

    ReplyDelete
  10. This week's official answers for the record, Part 1:

    Appetizer Menu

    World History Appetizer:
    Colonial cookware, eh?
    Name a word (often preceded by “eh”) that was Regency-era (early 19th-century British) slang for “You know?” Follow this, without a space, with a word for a versatile cooking utensil, ancient versions of which were found in Han Dynasty-era tombs. (This word, however, was coined much more recently, around the birth dates of those Baby Boomers just now becoming eligible to collect Social Security.)
    Spell the result of this of words backward to form a synonym of “fawn” that has Oriental roots.
    What are these two words and the synonym?
    Answer:
    wot, wok; kowtow

    MENU

    Copacetic Slice
    Zany poker face-off, pick a winner
    Rank the following three sentences in their correct order, from best to third-best:
    A: If I’ve been dealt all face cards I put on my poker face, hiding how peaceful and copacetic I really feel.
    B: Thanks to social media networking I learned that many Deadheads have outworn their vinyl copies of the “Workingman’s Dead” album with its masterful picking.
    C. The magician’s evening sleight-of-hand zaniness often climaxed with him pulling a jackrabbit from a hat, eliciting wholehearted applause.
    There are six possible rankings: ABC, ACB, BAC, BCA, CAB, AND CBA. Explain your ranking.
    Answer:
    CAB
    In poker, a straight flush beats four of a kind, and four of a kind beats a full house. Thus:
    Best: The magician'S EVENing slEIGHT-of-hand zaNINEss ofTEN climaxed with him pulling a JACKrabbit from a hat, eliciting WHOLEHEARTED applause. (straight flush: 7, 8, 9, 10, Jack, all of hearts)
    Second-best: IF I'VE been dealt all fACE cards I put on my poker fACE, hiding how peACEful and copACEtic I really feel. (four of a kind: 5, Ace, Ace, Ace, Ace)
    Third-best: Thanks to social media neTWOrKING I learned that many Deadheads have ouTWOrn their vinyl copies of the "WorKINGman's Dead" album with its masterful picKING. (full house: 2, 2, King, King, King)

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  11. This week's official answers for the record, Part 2:

    Riffing Off Shortz And Donabedian Slices:
    Critters and their cries
    Puzzleria!’s Riffing Off Shortz and Donabedian Slices read:
    ONE:
    Think of a popular three-word song title from the 1980s, in 9 letters. If you have the right one, you can rearrange the letters to name a carnivorous marine mammal and a carnivorous mammal that has been associated with Chanel No. 5.
    What are these mammals? What is the song title?
    Here are hints: The title is in a foreign language. One of its three words is an apostrophized contraction. The two mammals alliterate.
    Answer:
    Seal; civet; C’est la Vie

    TWO:
    Think of an mammal in 3 letters, and a word sometimes used to name an interesting and unusual part of its body in 4 letters. If you have the right word, you can rearrange the letters to name a kind of bird and the sound it makes.
    What are this mammal, body part, bird and sound it makes?
    Answer:
    cow, craw; crow, caw
    THREE:
    Think of a ruminant mammal in 3 letters and a kind of food it doesn’t eat in four letters. If you have the right ones, you can rearrange the letters to name a smaller mammal and the sound it makes.
    What are this other mammal and the sound it makes?
    Answer:
    Cat, meow; cow, meat;
    FOUR:
    Think of a popular one-word song title in 9 letters. If you have the right one, you can rearrange the letters to name fragrant things that are worn, in 4 letters, and how they were made, a past-tense verb in 5 letters. What are these fragrant things and how were they made? Here’s a hint: The title is in a foreign language.
    Answer:
    Leis, sewed; (Edelweiss)
    FIVE:
    Think of two winged creatures: a bird of prey in 4 letters and a productive insect in 8 letters. If you have the right ones, you can rearrange the letters (after replacing a “b” with a “d”) to name an animal, in 6 letters and the sound it makes, in 6 letters split by a hyphen. What are the animal and the hyphenated sound it makes?
    Answer:
    donkey, hee-haw; (hawk, honeybee)

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  12. Riffing Off Shortz And Donabedian Slices:
    Critters and their cries (continued)

    SIX:
    Think of a popular two-word song title in 11 letters. If you have the right one, you can rearrange the letters to name the first word in the three-word title of a joyous Christmas carol in four letters, and a word in the lyrics of a joyous Christmas carol with a five-word title. What is the two-word song title?
    Here’s a hint: The two-word song title is in a foreign language. The word in the lyrics of the carol with the five-word title is one of four words in the song’s chorus, which is in a foreign language.
    Answer:
    Danke Schoen; (Deck, Hosanna; Deck the Halls; Ding Dong Merrily On High, with its chorus "Gloria, Hosanna in excelsis")
    SEVEN:
    Think of a popular three-word song title in 12 letters. If you have the right one, you can rearrange the letters to name a plural 4-letter noun for two participants in a same-sex marriage gone wrong, and an 8-letter verb for what the Catholic church might have done to the marriage after the same-sex couple divorced... assuming the church had somehow condoned the marriage in the first place. What is the song title? Here’s a hint: The title is in a foreign language.
    Answer:
    "Auld Lang Syne" (The GAY couple might have sought to have their failed marriage ANNULLED by the tribunal office of Catholic church after divorcing.)

    Lead Lady Lead Dessert:
    Starlets of stage and “synonma”

    Remove a man’s first name from the end of a past actress’s first name, forming a word. Change the second letter of her last name to an “m” and switch it with the third letter, forming a synonym of the first word. Who is this actress and what are these synonyms?
    Answer:
    Betty Grable; Bet Gamble

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete