Friday, February 25, 2022

Eco’s miscellany of mystification; A not-at-all-odd American woman; Vehicular “TV-Guide-o-cide!” Making the mathematical mechanical; “Please don’t squeeze the arm, chin!”

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

A not-at-all-odd American woman

Take the first name of a famous American womanReplace its last letter with an antonym of “odd.” 

Anagram the result to get a word associated with this American woman’s last name. 

Who is this woman?

Appetizer Menu

Econfusing Appetizer:

Eco’s miscellany of mystification

1. Name a word for what you might use to expand something. That same word is also what you might use to reduce something. 

Note: This word isn’t something like a pump – one that is used to pump water into a swimming pool, or to pump sewage out of a septic tank. The “expansion” and “reduction"  functions of the word we are seeking are completely different from each other.

2. Insert  a vowel within the full name of a well-known actress. Then remove the first four letters of her first name and the last letter of her last name.

The result will be the name of a world capital. 

Who is the actress and what is the capital?

3. Name a breed of dog. 

Reverse the last two letters (or change the vowel sound) of the last syllable, and the result will be a well-known office supply brand. 

What is the dog, and what is the brand?

4. Name something you might use for an external problem. Add one letter somewhere in the word for something you might use for an internal problem. Change that letter to get something you might use for an internal or an external problem. What are the three words?

5. The first and last name of a well-known thespian – one who appeared on stage, film
and television – are the names of two famous opponents. 

Who is this thespian?

Who are these opponents?

MENU

Transformative Slice:

Making the mathematical mechanical

Name something mathematical, in two words. 

Change the first and fourth letters of its second
word to an “e” and “a”. 

Remove a numerical prefix from within the first word. 

Remove the space between the words. 

The result is something mechanical. 

What are these two things?

Riffing Off Shortz And Hochbaum Slices:

“Please don’t squeeze the arm, chin!”

Will Shortz’s February 20th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Alan Hochbaum of Duluth, Georgia, reads:

Name a part of the human body. Insert the name of another part of the human body. You’ll get a brand name found at the supermarket. What is it?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Hochbaum Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Take a five-letter synonym of “humbug” or “nonsense.” Take also a three-letter interjection of “disdain” or “contempt” that one may make upon hearing such humbug. 

Change the middle letter in the synonym to a letter that often makes the same sound as that replaced letter. Move the last letter of the interjection to the beginning of the interjection.

Insert the altered interjection somewhere within the altered synonym.

The result is the surname of a puzzle-maker whose first name, spelled backward, is the name of Simba’s spouse.

Who is this puzzle-maker?

What are the synonym and interjection?

ENTREE #2

Name a three-letter object. It can be inside a three-letter or seven-letter thing, both which end in “-en” and are synonyms. You might find the three-letter object within a container in a still-life painting.

Now take a six-letter past-tense verb for what Ishmael Boorg and “the Dude” did. The still-life painting container is also the present-tense form of what Boorg and “the Dude” did.

Insert the three-letter object within the past-tense verb to form an adjective that describes many a broncobuster.

What are the object and the two synonymous places where it might be?

What did Boorg and “the Dude” do?

What adjective describes many a broncobuster?

Hint: The three-letter object rhymes with the first syllable of a noun that describes Ishmael Boorg or “the Dude.”

ENTREE #3

Take a six-letter synonym of “to make.” Insert within it something found in the
center of drupaceous things, like a cherry or peach, to make a nine-letter verb that means “to make a crackling sound,” 
like a Rice Krispie, for example.

What are this six-letter synonym and nine-letter verb? 

What is found in the center of something drupaceous?

ENTREE #4

Dean was depressed, downcast and dejected, so he foolishly ______ a quart of bourbon. Insert a synonym of “center” near the center of the six-letter verb that belongs in that blank. 

The result, which begins with a “d,” is a synonym of “depressed, downcast and dejected.”

What are the verb in the blank and the synonyms of “center” and “depressed?”

ENTREE #5

Name, in four letters, a crispy or soft corn or wheat tortilla that is folded or rolled and stuffed with a mixture (as of seasoned meat, cheese, and lettuce) that one might enjoy for breakfast. 

Alas, a troublesome and mischievous mythological being similar to a fairy or demon is just tiny enough to be hiding within the tortilla along with the stuffed mixture.

Mix up the three letters in this being and insert them in the center of the four-letter tortilla. 
The result is a brand of breakfast punch with which you might wash down the tortilla and tiny demon. 

What are this breakfast tortilla, tiny demon and punch?

ENTREE #6

Take a two-word brand name found at the supermarket. Remove the first two and final two letters from the brand. The remaining letters spell a two-word description of either:

1. Turkey, Morocco, Ireland or Mauritania, because they consume so much tea, or

2. China, Brazil, Mexico or Germany, because they produce so much beer.

Now take the two pairs of letters you removed. Place them side-by-side to form a verb that is the root of the word that precedes “... the sick” in The Classic Hippocratic Oath.

A synonym of this verb is another verb for a process that is applied to products bearing the two-word supermarket brand – a process that preserves the products with salt and nitrites.

What is this brand name? 

What is the synonym of the 4-letter verb formed from the beginning and ending letter-pairs of the brand?

ENTREE #7

Take a two-word brand name found at the supermarket. The first two letters and last three letters, side-by-side, spell a word associated with kindness, being and milk.

The four remaining letters, in order, if you advance each of them two places later in the circular alphabet, spell a type of thin, flat bread that can be separated to form a pocket that you can use to hold leftovers from the brand-name supermarket item.

What is the two-word brand name?

What is the word associated with kindness, being and milk?

What is the type of thin, flat bread?

ENTREE #8

Name parts of the human body that you have more than 650 of. Take the etymolological root of each such body part, which is a five-letter English word for a certain small creature.

Insert seven letters within this English word, then divide the result into two words of seven and five letters. 

These words form a brand name beverage found at the supermarket.

The seven letters you inserted can be anagramed to form a three-letter substance and a four-letter place where that substance would surely melt.

What are this brand name beverage, 650 body parts and small creature?

What are the substance and place it would melt?

ENTREE #9

Name an eight-letter hyphenated brand of a product you pour or squeeze. The first two and last two letters, side-by-side, spell product whose brand names include: Mommy’s Time Out, Middle Sister, Arrogant Frog, Bohemian Highway, Red Guitar, Running With Scissors, Bearitage, Cat’s Pee on a Gooseberry Bush, Goats Do Roam In Villages, Ten Minutes By Tractor, Rocket Science and Mad Housewife.

The remaining letters, in order, if you advance them 12 places later on in the circular alphabet, spell an Italian mountain.

What are this brand name and mountain?

Hint: Place after the brand name something the mountain is famous for spewing. The result is a British rock band that achieved success in the early-to-mid-1970s.

ENTREE #10

Note: The following NPR riff-off puzzle is the brainchild of our friend Plantsmith, whose “Garden of Puzzley Delights” puzzle feature appears regularly on Puzzleria!

Name a well-known beverage brand. Move its first letter to the end and change a vowel to another vowel. The result is a word for body
parts associated with a second beverage.

What are the beverage brand, body parts and second beverage?

Hint: The beverage brand begins with a four-letter word that sometimes precedes a small spherical legume, and ends with a five-letter pome fruit.

Dessert Menu

Edutainment Dessert:

Vehicular “TV-Guide-o-cide!”

Name an edutainment vehicle, as seen on TV.
 
Replace a vowel with a different vowel. 

The first half of the result spells a vehicle. The second half, if rearranged, also spells a vehicle. 

What are these three vehicles?

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.

55 comments:

  1. Just solved the Schpuzzle, after going through dozens and dozens of first names; oddly, I have found one that made a word, but had the WRONG last name with that person, i.e. the wrong person. Then all of a sudden, the correct person hit me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Congratulations, ViolinTeddy. It is a tough puzzle, IMO. Thus, you are a smart cookie, IMO!

      LegoWhoHasAHigh"MyOpinion"OfViolinTeddy

      Delete
    2. I am stuck on the Slice after spending a LONG time on it; you wouldn't believe the complicated math term I've come up with that simply won't work.

      I also got answers for all the appetizers, however, I'm not utterly confident that #1's or #5's are the intended solutions.

      I've just waded through the Entrees, but boy, that #8 is impossible! Have spent a very very long time on it, changing things around, never finding a viable beverage brand. however, my search allowed me to stumble upon the brand for #10, which had stumped me up to that point.

      On to Dessert. : o )

      Delete
    3. " Stuck on a bandaid or a bandaids stuck on me." Going add crazy.

      Delete
    4. You mean "ad crazy", I presume. Speaking of ad lyrics, my all-time favorite was from years ago, when I lived in southern CA:
      "There's something K-new, at a store K-near. K-nudsen frozen low-fat yogurt now is here. K-nice in a dish, or on a cone, Iiiit's K-not the same as yogurts you have K-nown. Oh yes, it's K-new, K-nourishing, too, and if you've K-never tasted it, please do....if people who buy it go, "That's K-nice", we say "K-know", it's K-nudsen frozen yogurt. It's K-new!!!"

      I'm sure it loses something without its tune, which I am singing along as I type!

      Delete
    5. For Entree #8, my image of George, Jay and (in particular) Ahrnold my prove helpful in discerning the more than 650 body parts.
      Slice hint: Most musicians I know (Like VT) were at the top of their math classes.

      LegoWhoSearchedForTheK'nudsenFrozenLowFatYogurtJingleTuneButCouldOnlyComeUpWithThis!

      Delete
    6. OOh, that Kathy commercial is pretty cute. I forgot to note, above, that 'my' Knudsen commercial was on the radio, not TV.

      But I can (brag) add that I was, indeed, at the top of my math class. Will now go try to figure out what your Entree 8 hint means....

      Delete
    7. Re Ahnold et al (I don't know what the other two guys have to do with it)....I believe I already had the correct '650' body part....it's four of the additional seven letters that are leading me astray, and besides, no matter WHAT I choose to sprinkle thru the five-letter 'root' word, I can't come up with anything that makes sense as a beverage brand. (I began to dread looking for such brands!)

      Delete
    8. Eyelashes have a number of these i might conjecture.

      Delete
    9. Eyelashes have a number of what, PLTH?

      Delete
    10. Well i was going down a rabbit hole on that one. A number of hairs or lashes?

      Delete
    11. My hint above is for the three letter item.

      Delete
    12. Hmmm...you refer to Entree #8, I presume? And here I thought I already knew the three-letter word (the one that melts, right?), but clearly, it doesn't apply to your hint. Time to rethink....

      Delete
    13. Yes number 8. Have two more entrees and. Plus Eco's 1 and 5.
      Is this week a two-fer for Alan??

      Delete
    14. I saw that, too, PLTH, and wondered if someone transcribed the wrong name, or whether Alan H really got two in a row. Has such a thing ever happened before?

      I still have made no sense of #8!!!

      Delete
    15. I don't know if that has ever happened before.
      Not everything melts at room temperature.

      Delete
    16. You probably won't find this brand at McDonald's either.

      Delete
    17. I've never seen any of her movies. Clearly, this must be a beverage brand that I've never heard of.

      But your comment about not everything melting at room temp makes me think my three-letter word isn't right...hmmm.....

      Delete
    18. YIPPEE, PLTH, I just solved #8, at long last. Finally stumbled on the brand (I never drink any of the stuff) by going after ones that start with the appropriate letter. And after many tries, the brand finally showed up. .Bingo!

      Delete
    19. Thank you.....I'd been trying to make something out of 'ice'.

      Delete
    20. I'm not very confident re giving hints, but turn-about is fair play, as t hey say, so re #7, PLTH, the brand has a distant connection to TVs (I think that's a hint worthy of Blaine's blog?)

      Delete
    21. Have you had much luck with Blaine's this week? Let's see the brand has a distant connection to T.V's.Don't they all??
      LOL. Moving on to the Schpuzzle. I see Cranberry is still shopping.

      Delete
    22. And yesterday i went shopping and got everything except what i had written down on my list as number one..Bread. Sometimes cluing is -well a challenge??

      Delete
    23. Here is the classic Blaine clue," this puzzle has a connection to a former one." LOL

      Delete
    24. Well, yeah, I realize that Blaine cues are pretty obscure, and actually (as has been discussed heretofore) not meant to help anyone. However, mine above was the only clue I could think of, without being too obvious.

      No, I got nowhere on the NPR puzzle....like someone wrote, I thought it was Redd Foxx,because I hadn't noticed the word "respectively", so that killed that idea. And I had also, like someone wrote, got all excited at "Cate", but of course, Blanchet isn't an adjective.

      Delete
    25. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    26. A sheep who has escaped the flock?

      Delete
    27. Thanks for the clue VT. My brother in Olympia says flooding is bad in Washington state.

      Delete
    28. Any hints for the dog in question in Eco's list?

      Delete
    29. I'm not sure which clue you are referring to, PLTH (I was just joking about the sheep....it wasn't a clue to anything.)

      However, hopefully Eco won't mind if I attempt a clue for your missing dog....think wrinkles. I hope that's not too obvious.

      Delete
    30. Re rain, yes we are being deluged, too Where in WA is your brother?

      Delete
    31. He is in Lacey just of Olympia.

      Delete
  2. Good Friday y'all!
    Had a busy day today. Needed to get a haircut, but the woman who usually does it has moved to a new location, so we had to find it. Also, she had a doctor's appointment which explained why we kept getting an answering machine for an hour or two. Had lunch from Arby's, then made a grocery run at Winn Dixie. Had to go back later because we didn't get out of there with all our groceries! And somehow come to find out I didn't put them with everything else in the first place! Finally got the haircut, BTW.
    Checked P! late last night, and could only get eco's #3 and #5(intense feeling of deja vu with the latter), and Entrees #1-5, #7, and #9. Looking forward to any and all hints that may help to solve the others.
    Good luck in solving to all, please stay safe, and keep up with all vaccine/booster information. Cranberry out!
    pjbRefusesToTalkAnymoreAboutTheWinnDixieIncident(CouldHappenToAnybody!)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That happened to me last week when i did not realize there were three bags of groceries at Ingles and left with two. Oh well.

      Delete
  3. Where is everybody else? PLTH and I seem to be having the only conversation this week?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sorry guys, I hadn't even realized y'all were monopolizing the conversation all this time. I have a dental appointment tomorrow around 2:00PM, so I've been otherwise occupied. But I have realized there have been NO hints as of yet, and some of us need some help right about now! Come on Lego, throw us a bone! Eleventh hour time, man!
      pjbShouldHaveSaidSomethingSooner,HeNowRealizes

      Delete
    2. BTW As soon as I've got my meeting with the dentist out of the way, I'll send another long-overdue cryptic crossword your way, Lego. Check your email tomorrow!
      pjbWaitingForHisTimeInTheRotation(NowThatHeKnowsThereIsOne)

      Delete
    3. Where has Lego been this whole time?
      pjb?

      Delete
  4. Not much clicked this week:

    Schpuzzle: [stymied]

    Appetizers:
    1. Inflation (expands balloons; reduces value of $$)
    2. [stymied]
    3. Shar Pei & Sharpie
    4. [stymied]
    5. Lee Grant; (Robert E.) Lee & (Ulysses) Grant

    T Slice: [stymied]

    Entrees:
    1. Alan Hochbaum; Hokum & Bah
    2. Egg; Hen & Chicken; Bowl; Bowlegged
    3. Create & Crepitate; Pit
    4. Downed; Heart; Downhearted
    5. Taco; Imp; Tampico
    6. Hebrew National; Cure (Heal)
    7. Hungry-Man; Human; Pita
    8. Maxwell House, Muscles & Mouse; Wax & Hell
    9. Wish-Bone& Etna
    10. Snapple; Nipples; Milk

    Dessert: [stymied]

    Toughies, Lego, eco, & P'Smith. Good exercise, but one couldn't get very far. On to Friday!


    ReplyDelete
  5. 3/1/22 -39 degrees AM

    Schpuzzle of the Week:???

    Appetizer:
    Inflation -
    2.
    3. Bull dog??
    4.
    5. Lee Grant
    Slice// Binomial distribution- Distributor.

    ENTREE #1 Alan Hochbaum, Hokum, Bah, Alan–Nala

    ENTREE #2
    Bowled- egg- Bow legged

    ENTREE #3
    Create- pit- Crepitate
    ENTREE #4
    Downed, heart- downhearted
    ENTREE #5
    Taco-imp- Tampico
    ENTREE #6
    Hebrew –??? Cure
    ENTREE #7
    Human/ Pita -ngry— Hungry Man
    ENTREE #8
    Muscle/ mouse- Wax and hell. Maxwell House.
    ENTREE #9 Wi SGBO fromEtna Mix Wishbone -
    Entree #10. Snapple/ Nipple and Milk.



    Dessert Menu
    Jeopardy- change a vowel
    Jeep, Dray- ( never heard of this one-some kind of cart)

    ReplyDelete
  6. Sorry, didn't have much time to work on the puzles this week. This is all I got.

    Entrées
    #8: MUSCLES → MOUSE, ICE or TIN, HELL →
    #9: WINE + SHBO → WISH-BONE

    ReplyDelete
  7. Appetizer Menu
    1. INFLATION
    3. SHAR-PEI, SHARPIE
    5. LEE GRANT(Robert E. and Ulysses S.)
    Menu
    Entrees
    1. ALAN HOCHBAUM, HOKUM, BAH
    2. EGG, HEN, CHICKEN, BOWLED, BOWLEGGED
    3. CREPITATE, CREATE, PIT
    4. DOWNHEARTED, DOWNED, HEART
    5. TACO, IMP, TAMPICO
    6. HEBREW NATIONAL, BREW NATION, HEAL, CURE
    7. HUNGRY MAN, HUMAN, PITA
    8. MUSCLE, MOUSE, MAXWELL HOUSE, WAX, HELL
    9. WINE, WISHBONE, WISHBONE ASH, ETNA
    10. SNAPPLE, NIPPLES, MILK
    Dessert
    JEOPARDY, JEEP, DRAY
    Stymie-ing puzzles this week.-pjb

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

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    A not-at-all-odd American woman
    Take the first name of a famous American woman.
    Replace its last letter with an antonym of “odd.”
    Anagram the result to get a word associated with her last name.
    Who is this woman?
    Answer
    Julia Child; juvenile, child
    JULIA=>JULI+EVEN=>JUVENILE

    Appetizer Menu
    Econfusing Appetizer:
    Eco’s miscellany of mystification
    1. Name a word for what you might use to expand something. That same word is also what you might use to reduce something.
    (Note that this word isn’t something like a pump – with which you pump water into a swimming pool, for example, but pump sewage out of a septic tank. In the word we are seeking, however, its “expansion” and “reduction” definitions and functions are completely different from each other.)
    Answer:
    Contractor
    2. Insert a vowel within the full name of a well-known actress. Then remove the first four letters of her first name and the last letter of her last name.
    The result will be the name of a world capital.
    Who is the actress and what is the capital?
    Answer:
    (Mari)SaO Tome(i); (Sao Tome is the capital of the Central American island country of Sao Tome and Principe.)
    3. Name a breed of dog. Reverse the last two letters (or change the vowel sound) of the last syllable, and the result will be a well-known office supply brand. What is the dog, and what is the brand?
    Answer:
    Shar-pei => Sharpie
    4. Name something you might use for an external problem. Add one letter somewhere in the word for something you might use for an internal problem. Change that letter to get something you might use for an internal or an external problem. What are the three words?
    Answer:
    Mediation => medication => meditation
    5. The first and last name of a well-known thespian – one who appeared on stage, film and television – are the names of two famous opponents.
    Who is this thespian?
    Who are these opponents?
    Answer:
    Lee Grant (who was nominated 4 times for Best Supporting Actress, winning once, won Best Actress at Cannes, and nominated 7 times for Primetime Emmy's, winning twice)
    Robert E. Lee, Ulysses S. Grant

    Lego...

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

    MENU
    Transformative Slice:
    Making the mathematical mechanical
    Name something mathematical, in two words.
    Change the first and fourth letters of its second word to an “e” and “a”.
    Remove a numerical prefix from within the first word.
    Remove the space between the words.
    The result is something mechanical. What are these two things?
    Answer:
    Mobius Strip; Mousetrap
    Mobius Strip=>Mobius etrap=>Mous etrap=>Mousetrap

    Riffing Off Shortz And Hochbaum Slices:
    “Please don’t squeeze the body parts!”
    ENTREE #1
    Take a five-letter synonym of “humbug” or “nonsense. ” Take also a three-letter interjection of “disdain” or “contempt” that one may make upon hearing such humbug.
    Change the middle letter in the synonym to a letter that often makes the same sound as that replaced letter. Move the last letter of the interjection to the beginning of the interjection.
    Insert the altered interjection somewhere within the altered synonym.
    The result is the surname of a puzzle-maker whose first name, spelled backward, is the name of Simba’s spouse.
    Who is this puzzle-maker?
    What are the synonym and interjection?
    Answer:
    (Alan) Hochbaum; hokum (hocum), Bah! (hba);
    (Nala)
    ENTREE #2
    Name a three-letter object. It can be inside a three-letter or seven-letter thing, each which ends in “-en.” You might also find the three-letter object within a container in a still-life painting.
    Now take a six-letter past-tense verb for what Ishmael Boorg and “the Dude” did. The still-life painting container is also the present-tense form of what Boorg and “the Dude” did.
    Insert the three-letter object within the past-tense verb to form an adjective that describes many a broncobuster.
    What is the object and the places you find it?
    What did Boorg and “the Dude” do?
    What adjective describes many a broncobuster?
    Hint: The three-letter object rhymes with the first syllable of a noun that describes Ishmael Boorg or “the Dude.”
    Answer:
    Egg, Hen or Chicken, Bowled, Bowlegged
    Hint: "Egg" rhymes with the first syllable of "Kegler."
    ENTREE #3
    Take a six-letter synonym of “to make” and insert within it something you’ll find in the center of something drupaceous, like a cherry or peach, to make the nine-letter verb that means “to make a crackling sound,” like a Rice Krispie, for example.
    What are this six-letter synonym and nine-letter verb?
    What is found in the center of something drupaceous?
    Answer:
    Crepitate, create, pit
    ENTREE #4
    Dean was depressed, downcast and dejected, so he ______ a quart of bourbon. Insert a synonym of “center” near the center of the six-letter verb that belongs in that blank. The result, which begins with a “d,” is a synonym of “depressed, downcast and dejected.”
    What are the verb in the blank and the synonyms of “center” and “depressed?”
    Answer:
    Downed; Heart; Downhearted

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  10. This week's official answers for the record, Part 3:
    ENTREE #5
    Name, in four letters, a crispy or soft corn or wheat tortilla that is folded or rolled and stuffed with a mixture (as of seasoned meat, cheese, and lettuce) that one might enjoy for breakfast.
    Alas, a troublesome and mischievous mythological being similar to a fairy or demon is just tiny enough to be hiding within the tortilla along with the stuffed mixture.
    Mix up the three letters in this being and insert them in the center of the four-letter four-letter tortilla. The result is a brand of breakfast punch with which you might wash down the tortilla and tiny demon..
    What are this breakfast tortilla, tiny demon and punch?
    Answer:
    Taco, imp, Tampico
    ENTREE #6
    Take a two-word brand name found at the supermarket. Remove the first two and final two letters from the brand. The remaining letters spell a two-word description of either:
    1. Turkey, Morocco, Ireland or Mauritania, because they consume so much tea, or
    2. China, Brazil, Mexico or Germany, because they produce so much beer.
    Now take the two pairs of letters you removed. Place them side-by-side to form a verb that is the root of the word that precedes “... the sick” in The Classic Hippocratic Oath.
    A synonym of this verb is another verb for a process that is applied to products bearing the two-word supermarket brand – a process that preserves the products with salt and nitrites.
    What is this brand?
    What is the synonym of the verb formed from the beginning and ending letter-pairs of the brand?
    Answer:
    Hebrew National (beef franks); Cure (Heal)
    ENTREE #7
    Take a two-word brand name found at the supermarket. The first two letters and last three letters, side-by-side, spell a word associated with kindness, being and milk.
    The four remaining letters, in order, if you advance each of them two places later in the circular alphabet, spell a type of thin, flat bread that can be separated to form a pocket that you can use to hold leftovers from the brand-name supermarket item.
    What is the two-word brand name?
    What is the word associated with kindness, being and milk?
    What is the type of thin, flat bread?
    Answer:
    Hungry Man (frozen dinners); Human; Pita
    ENTREE #8
    Name parts of the human body that you have more than 650 of. Take the etymolological root of each such body part, which is a five-letter English word for a certain small creature.
    Insert seven letters within this English word, then divide the result into two words of seven and five letters. These words form a brand name beverage found at the supermarket.
    The seven letters you inserted can be anagramed to form a three-letter substance and a four-letter place where that substance would surely melt.
    What are this brand name beverage, 650 body parts and small creature?
    What are the substance and place it would melt?
    Answer:
    Maxwell House (coffee); muscles, mouse; wax, Hell

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  11. This week's official answers for the record, Part 4:
    ENTREE #9
    Name an eight-letter hyphenated brand of a product you pour or squeeze. The first two and last two letters, side-by-side, spell product whose brand names include: Mommy’s Time Out, Middle Sister, Arrogant Frog, Bohemian Highway, Red Guitar, Running With Scissors, Bearitage, Cat’s Pee on a Gooseberry Bush, Goats Do Roam In Villages, Ten Minutes By Tractor, Rocket Science and Mad Housewife.
    The remaining letters, in order, if you advance them 12 places later on in the circular alphabet, spell an Italian mountain.
    What are this brand name and mountain?
    Hint: Place after the brand name something the mountain is famous for spewing. The result is a British rock band that achieved success in the early-to-mid-1970s.
    Answer:
    Wish-bone (salad dressing); Etna
    Hint: Wishbone Ash
    ENTREE #10
    Note: The following NPR riff-off puzzle is the brainchild of our friend Plantsmith, whose “Garden of Puzzley Delights” puzzle feature appears regularly on Puzzleria!
    Name a well-known beverage brand. Move its first letter to the end and change a vowel to another vowel. The result is a word for body parts associated with a second beverage.
    What are the beverage brand, body parts and second beverage?
    Hint: The beverage brand begins with a four-letter word that sometimes precedes a small spherical legume, and ends with a five-letter pome fruit.
    Answer:
    Snapple; nipples, milk
    Hint: Snap pea

    Dessert Menu
    Edutainment Dessert:
    Vehicular “TV-Guide-o-cide!”
    Name an edutainment vehicle seen on TV.
    Replace a vowel with a different vowel.
    The first half of the result spells a vehicle. The second half, if rearranged, also spells a vehicle.
    What are these three vehicles?
    Answer
    Jeep, Dray; (Jeopardy!)

    Lego!

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  12. If there were last minute hints above, I haven't seen them....

    SCHPUZZLE: JULIA CHILD => JULIEVEN => JUVENILE

    ECOAPPETIZERS:

    1. STOVE (I.E. FLAME)….HEAT WATER, makes it expand to a gas; SAUCE ‘REDUCTION’, as sauce itself gets thicker while cooking, i.e. in a RECIPE.

    2. MARISA TOMEI => SA(O) TOME

    3. SHAR-PEI => SHARPIE

    4. MEDIATION / MEDICATION / MEDITATION

    5. JAMES STEWART; JAMES I, KING OF SCOTLAND and his UNCLE STEWART, Earl of Atholl, who participating in assassinating him.


    SLICE: ALGEBRAIC INTEGER => ???? ENTAGER

    ENTREES:

    1. HOKUM & BAH => HOCUM HBA => HOCHBAUM; ALAN => NALA

    2. EGG; HEN & CHICKEN; BOWLED => BOW-LEGGED

    3. CREATE & PIT => CREPITATE

    4. DOWNED & HEART => DOWNHEARTED

    5. TACO & IMP => TAMPICO

    6. HE-AL / CURE; BREW NATION => HEBREW NATIONAL

    7. HUMAN; PITA => NGRY; HUNGRY-MAN

    8. MUSCLES => MOUSE & WAX / HELL => MAXWELL HOUSE

    9. WISH-BONE => WINE; ETNA; [Hint: WISHBONE ASH] Searching a long time for the rock group saved me having to figure out the brand name!

    10. SNAPPLE => NIPPLES; FORMULA or MOTHER'S MILK? [Hint: SNAP PEA & SNAP APPLE]

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  13. VT Cool you got the Schpuzzle. Somehow i read Eco's directions wrong and thought you had to switch first and last letters of the name.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. THanks, PLTH (re Schpuzzle comment).....I can only assume you somehow mixed up Eco's puzzle (whichever one it was) with the NPR puzzle of the week?

      Delete
  14. VT really went out of her way to get an alternate answer for Appetizer #5. I thought Lee Grant was so obvious I was sure I'd heard it used it here before.
    pjbAlsoRealizedThisWeek'sSundayPuzzleWasMuchEasierThanHeThought!

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