Friday, March 11, 2022

Arts & Rec & “Mussy Marceau” “My Voice is my instrument!” “EnChoiring” minds want to know... puzzle answers! Topological bake shop; 3.14-Pi-Day-Puzzle 2.0

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

3.14-Pi-Day-Puzzle 2.0

Note: On March 8, 2020, Will Shortz used a Pi Day puzzle I created as the NPR challenge

This week’s Schpuzzle of the Week is a timely “Pi Day sequel” to that NPR puzzle... think of it as a “3.14-Pi-Day-Puzzle 2.0!”

Lego...

This week’s Schpuzzle of the Week involves Pi Day, which we celebrate this coming Monday,
March 14, which is commonly written as 3/14. That has been designated Pi Day because 3-1-4 are the first three digits of pi.

But why might Hall-of-Fame ballplayers Brooks Robinson, Mike Schmidt and George Brett wait until October 1 to celebrate Pi Day?

Appetizer Menu


Skydiverting Appetizer:

Arts & Rec & “Mussy Marceau”

1. 🎭 Think of a six-letter word applicable to the arts. 

Insert an “M” in the exact middle and you will have another word that has an opposite meaning. 

What are these two words?

2. 🎳 Think of a place you might go to for recreation in two words. 

Anagram the combined letters of those words to discover why you may not be able to use that place.

What are this place and reason you may not be able to use it?

3. 🙉 Take a common four-word phrase beginning with the article “A” followed by three words of six, two and four letters. 

Spoonerize the second and fourth words to describe a pantomimist in disheveled attire.

What is the original four-word phrase beginning with the article “A”?

What is the four-word description of the pantomimist in disheveled attire?

MENU

Soloist Slice:

“My Voice is my instrument!”

Name a kind of composition that a soloist (like “ViolinTeddy,” for example) might play on an instrument. 

Change the second letter and add a letter near the end to spell the surname of a soloist whose voice is their instrument. 

What is this composition and who is this soloist?

Riffing Off Shortz And Hartenstein Slices:

“EnChoiring” minds want to know... puzzle answers!


Will Shortz’s March 6th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Ward Hartenstein of Rochester, New York, reads:

Words starting with a “kw-” sound usually start with the letters “QU-,” as in question, or “KW-,” as in Kwanzaa. What common, uncapitalized English word starting with a “kw-” sound contains none of the letters Q, U, K, or W?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Hartenstein Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Take the first name of a close relative – indeed, the second son – of a noted physicist. The second syllable of the name begins with a vowel, the first of four letters in that syllable. Those four letters spell what sounds  like the first name of a puzzle-maker. 

Who are the puzzle-maker and the son of the physicist?

Hint #1: The first syllable of the physicist’s second son’s first name consists of two consecutive letters of the alphabet, but not in alphabetical order.

Hint #2: The last six letters of the puzzle-maker’s surname are identical to the last six letters in the surname of the physicist and his son.

ENTREE #2

Words starting with a “kw-” sound usually start with the letters “QU-,” as in question, or “KW-,” as in Kwanzaa. Name two common, uncapitalized non-English words (that do appear, however, in English dictionaries) that start with a “kw-” sound but do not start with the letters “QU-,” as in question, or “KW-,” as in Kwanzaa?

Hint: The words are synonyms of “hairdresser” and “food.”

ENTREE #3

Just WHY is English pronunciation so darn tricky!

Take, for example, a four-letter word that means “to set, or to become more solid.”

1. Change the first letter to the letter it sounds like in the subject of a propaganda film starring actresses named Short and Miles. The result is an expression of exasperation oft voiced by a famous past violinist.

2. Next, change the first letter to the letter it sounds like in a word for Tex-Mex cuisine that is
etymologically rooted in “sash” or “belt.” The result is a 
pit of pandemonium. 

3. Finally, change the first letter to the letter it sounds like in a Handel Chorus crooned by a Choir. The result is a hoot, howl or holler.

What is the four-letter word that means “to set or become more solid?”

What are the propaganda film subject and violinist’s expression?

What are the Tex-Mex cuisine and pit of pandemonium?

What is the Handel Chorus crooned by a Choir and the hoot, howl or holler?

ENTREE #4

Name a two-syllable nine-letter word that refers to two adjacent vowel sounds occurring within the same syllable – as in the words
“hay” “boy” “out” and “noise.” 

The word contains seven consonants and two non-adjacent vowels.

What is this word?

ENTREE #5

Racquetball, Guitar, Juice, Vegetable, Wrestle.

Take one letter from each of these five words that, in order, spell an adjective that describes each of those five letters.

What is this five-letter adjective?

ENTREE #6

The first word Scarlett O’Hara speaks in the 1939 film “Gone with the Wind,” based on Margaret Mitchell’s novel, is a 12-letter word that precedes “War, war, war!”

A fable of uncertain origin involves a plural form of an eating utensil, in ten letters. The fable tells of a man who was given the opportunity, before he died, to see what heaven and hell look like. He finds that neither place has fire, brimstone and devils nor harps, clouds and angels. But both do have great banquet halls!

What are these 12-letter and 10-letter words?

What is notable about each of them?

ENTREE #7

Take a five-letter word associated with Moses. 

Now name a two-word caption for the image seen here, nine letters total, that is a homophone of that five-letter word.

Hint: Each word in the caption begins with a vowel.

Dessert Menu

Lip-smackin’ Dessert:

Topological bake shop

Name a four-word idiom that includes a word for
something put between one’s lips. 

Anagram the combined letters of the idiom to spell:

1. a boiled ‘n’ baked edible, 

2. a noun that a geometer might use to characterize that edible’s shape, and 

3. an adjective that geometer might use to describe the shape of a cool lip-smacking pastry. 

What are this idiom and three words?

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.

75 comments:

  1. Hey sports fans. Some very kwaint offerings this week.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Boy, are" > Boyer (my little tribute to Clete and Ken).

      3.14 in base three is 10.01:
      https://robertlovespi.net/2014/06/09/the-beginning-of-the-number-pi-in-binary-through-hexadecimal-etc/#:~:text=Trinary%20(base%2D3)%20pi,12101%2021011%2020022%2001202%20.%20.%20.

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    2. I wholeheartedly second your tribute to the "Boyer Boys," Paul.
      I would have used Ken in the Schpuzzle were he still alive and had he been inducted into the Hall of Fame (which arguably ought to have happened). I will always think of Ken as a Cardinal.
      And I will always think of Clete as a Yankee, and more of a "glovesman" than a "batsman..." although later in his career he batted clean-up behind Hank Aaron (!) in Atlanta where one year he hit 26 homers.

      LegoWhoGivesKudosToPaulForANiftyHintWhichOfCourseSailedRightOverLego'sHeadLikeAScreamingLineDrive!

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  2. A1. Sounds like a condiment. Pass the A1. Let's see artsy-fartsy. artsy? no that's not quite it.

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  3. A3. As Hilary loved to say, "It takes a village."

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  4. I think I should post a minor clarification to Appetizer #3. The question is What are these two phrases? I don't want anyone thinking the 2 Spoonerized words in the first phrase stand alone as the answer. You are Spoonerizing these two words in order to change the phrase.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Another good Friday to all here on the blog!
    Mom just went to Subway to get our supper. She'll be right back. Just saw all three contestants on "Wheel of Fortune" get stumped by the word MUDPUPPY as a toss-up puzzle. I never heard of it myself. Some kind of amphibian, I guess. Came after GREEN FROG and GIANT SALAMANDER. BTW One of them guessed GIANT ALLIGATOR after the M was revealed. I'm surprised they had no trouble with GREEN FROG after how it finally turned out. MUDPUPPY had every letter revealed and they were still stumped about that one! Pat Sajak had to just give up and introduce the final puzzle. I'd say that beats the FEATHER IN YOUR CAP debacle by a mile.
    Now to this week's offerings.
    Kinda tough this week. I have some sort of idea about the Schpuzzle(it's a bit of a stretch), of SDB's puzzles I solved #3(I'll be happy to reveal both phrases if necessary), I got the Soloist Slice, and all Entrees except #6 and #7(actually half of #6, because I've got the 12-letter word, not the 10). Looking forward to any hints provided in the next few days, as usual.
    In closing, good luck in solving to all, please stay safe, and make sure you've all had your shots. Cranberry out!
    pjbRemindingY'allHisNextCrypticCrosswordDropsHereOnThe18th!

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    Replies
    1. I may have dessert this week. As the cookie crumbles--as they say. Then again maybe not, but i am starting there. I wonder if there is a central theme this week?? Is it possible?

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    2. A1. I wonder if we need to expand our definition of the arts? Just as some consider boxing an art form. The pugilistic science.

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    3. Plantsmith,
      If there is any "central theme" in this week's "mess o' puzzles" (not counting, of course, skydiveboy's decidedly unmessy trio of skydiversions) it is purely accidental.
      As for boxing being an art form or science, Norman Mailer may have thought so, but I am not in his corner.

      LegoWhoWonders"What'sThePointillismOfPugilism?"

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    4. Isn't there a blues singer named that -Mud Puppy? There should be.

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    5. I'm surprised there hasn't been a rock group by that name.
      pjbAlreadyKnowsTomPettyStartedOutInAGroupCalled"Mudcrutch"

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    6. Strangest rock group name I've ever heard:
      AND YOU WILL KNOW US BY THE TRAIL OF DEAD
      pjbPrefersTheSimplicityOfNamesLike"TheBeatles"

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    7. I think i have A3 too and a possible alt for 2. We can check our answers on the side channel.

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    8. P'TH, what is the 'side channel?"

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    9. Cranberry is only about 200 miles from me as the crow flies- or a three hour drive on I-20 West.

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  6. ViolinTeddy,
    I am missing your usual Friday feedback. You (and your computer) are okay, I hope.

    LegoWhoWondersIfTheImageOfTheViolaPlayerInTheSliceLooksAnythingLikeViolinTeddy

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, I'm sorry to have worried you, Lego, although it's awfully nice to come here and find out tha tI was missed! My computer and I are fine, although it DID give me a load of a hard time yesterday afternoon, such that I finally had to give up and completely re-start the dumb thing. Then I went to bed, having had only about three hours of sleep the night before....well, I won't go on and on, but I never made it back down until midday today!

      I did spend some time at some point working on the puzzles...let's see....The Schpuzzle is, of course, hopeless for me (other than my having found the three guys' basic thing in common), but I was able to solved SDB's #1, the Slice, and all the Entrees (I loved #7, which I thought terribly clever).....didn't get the Dessert, however much I tried. At one point, I thought I was onto something, but in the end...sigh....

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    2. And no, the violist picture doen'st look like me..but once upon a time, I sent you a small pic via email, taken while I was singing on the OSU Chorale....did you forget?

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    3. Oooooh, I just realized that I had also solved SDB's #3...spent a long time on it, till finally it worked out.

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    4. The word on the picture was that it was shot from a drone above Greer Garson's balcony. Fake news?

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    5. Actually, VT, You may be closer to solving the Schpuzzle than you think... finding the three guys' basic thing in common is key. I'll have to see if I can find that OSU Chorale photo.

      LegoWhoIsHappyToHearThatViolinTeddyIsOkay(AndPerhapsEvenFitAsAFiddle!)

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    6. As for A1 i am waiting for VT's clue..What was Bobby's last
      "There was a hint on Blaine's blog a while back that would work for t his one? I don't think cinmema is a real word.

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    7. Am confused, P'th. DId I somehow reference A1 above? If so, I can't find it now. Also, are you saying that *I* said something about a hint on Blaine's blog....blah blah....if so, when did I write that?

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    8. Sorry to confuse. I thought you said you have A1 answered. The Blaine reference was to Bobby last who clued Blaine's clue about changing Pakistan- to Parisan for last week and i still don't see how it works. That was the hexidecimal value for France 10011100110. I guess that is base two -sorry.
      The Orthodox church here is selling Mushroom- cabbage filled Perogies for Easter. Think i will pass. Although i did have a cabbage burger once. Once.

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  7. My comment above about a theme for the week-refers to the dessert.As a clue. I have SDB three and perhaps an alternate for two that has a connection to the Beijing (sp)? olympics. Glad you are OK .I was worried you might have tried one of the mushrooms.

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  8. Also --there is more than one baked and boiled bakery good and it is not a Perogie-which i was just reading about and actually originated in China.

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  9. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  10. Morning Monday Hints:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    As I mentioned in my comment in reply to ViolinTeddy, "finding the three guys' basic thing in common" is the key to "solvation." (It is not quite as basic as the three being classified as human beings, or even major league Hall of Fame ballplayers... There may be a dozen pitchers on a major leauge team roster, and about five or or six outfielders, but only two or three catchers and just a few players who are capable of being "plugged in" to one of the other four infield positions.
    Or, put much more simply, "hot corner" is the key.

    Skydiverting Appetizer:
    skydiveboy prefers that his puzzles stand on their own, sans hinting, so I shall defer to his wishes.

    Soloist Slice:
    So, note that puzzle solvers who are familiar with this artist's Long Playing discography are at a distinct advantage.

    Riffing Off Shortz And Hartenstein Slices:
    ENTREE #1
    Weird Science
    ENTREE #2
    These synonyms of “hairdresser” and “food” begin with "co-" and "cu-" In other words, both begin with a "c".
    ENTREE #3
    "There's always room for" the four-letter word that means “to set or become more solid.”
    (The "violinist" appears in the video in the hint, just above, for Entree #2... At the 3:35 mark in the video you can hear the violinist voice the expression of exasperation.)
    ENTREE #4
    Schpuzzle
    ENTREE #5
    4-2-3-4-5
    ENTREE #6
    The 12-letter word that precedes “War, war, war!” begins with "f" and ends with "e."
    The plural form of an eating utensil, in ten letters, begins and ends with "s".
    ENTREE #7
    The five-letter word associated with Moses, alas, is currently much in the world news.
    Remove a Roman 11 from this word and what remains is the first half of "eleven."

    Lip-smackin’ Dessert:
    Groucho
    "Hey, gimme a messy section of that cool lip-smacking pastry!"

    LegoKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKone

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. E2. What is the name of that kitchen thing you make pesto with?

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    2. And I kept looking for something that goes from First Base to Pitcher to Second Base. What would one call that play? Off base, but Descendant in the Old Country adds/added a year today. At least it's not yet The Ides.

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    3. Double play? I know they called Robinson the "human vacuum" the way he scooped up the balls on the field.

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    4. Perhaps. But, more importantly, how would it be coded?

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    5. Like hitting for the cycle perhaps?

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    6. More like defensive positions by the numbers.

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    7. I am familiar with the classic 6-4-3 double play, GB, and have also witnessed DPs that are classified as 4-6-3, 5-4-3, 3-6-3, 1-6-3, 1-4-3 and 2-6-3.
      But a 3-1-4 double play?
      Well, maybe...
      One out, bottom of the ninth at Forbes Field. Pirates trail the Braves 1-0.
      Bill Mazeroski takes his lead off first base. Roberto Clemente steps into the batter's box. The crafty lefty Warren Spahn goes into his stretch, glances over toward first, keeping Mazeroski's lead modest, and throws a low-and-away sinker. Clemente tops the ball, resulting in a swinging bunt that dribbles down and hugs the chalk of the first base line. First-baseman Joe Adcock charges in, barehands the ball, and pegs it to Spahn who is scampering over to cover first base. Spahn grabs Adcock's throw on the run and brushes the side of the bag with his instep as he crosses into foul territory. The future Hall-of-Fame pitcher wheels and immediately looks back toward the infield. He sees Mazeroski just rounding second base on his way to third. The alert Pirate third base coach Frank Oceak, however, realizes that Spahn is poised to peg a pea toward base-three where third-baseman Eddie Matthews would easily place the tag on Mazeroski. Oceak raises his arms in alarm and yells at Maz to hightail it back to the safety of second base. The alert Spahnie, however, is not fazed. He pegs a perfectly placed pill into the Rawlings mitt of Braves second baseman Johnny Logan who promptly applies the tag to Maz's fingertips and he dives headlong back toward second base...
      3-1-4 double play! Game over! Braves win! Bra-a-a-a-aves win!


      LegoWhoObservesThatThe BravesBeatThePiratesAndThatPiIsARatio!

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    8. Guess they have a code ready when it comes around again. Beware the eve of the Ides of March?

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    9. What do the numbers mean? 1 is first base?

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    10. The boys of October??? Braves are reeling-Freddy is gone-kin d of.

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    11. P'smith: The numbers are defensive standard designations: 1. Pitcher 2. Catcher 3. 1st Base 4. 2nd Base, and so forth through 9. A throw from 1st to Pitcher to 2nd would be scored as a 3-1-4. Lego's 6-4-3 Double play would mean the play went from Shortstop to 2nd to 1st. And so endeth the extent of the baseball knowledge of your humble poster. Beware the Ides of March, Sports Fans.

      Delete
    12. That is a ton more than me, having never donned a bat.

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    13. When I was a teenager on a camping trip we found a bat in a package of napkins. (That taught us not to leave the supply box open.) We made the bat mascot for the trip and named him Masterson.

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    14. Why didn't you call him, Barclay?

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    15. Plantsmith,
      Speaking of "donning a bat," Don Drysdale (a classmate of Robert Redford at Van Nuys High School) was one of the better-hitting pitchers in Major League Baseball history. In 14 seasons he had 218 hits in 1,169 at-bats for a .186 batting average, including 96 runs, 26 doubles, 7 triples, 29 home runs, 113 runs batted in and 60 bases on balls. Drysdale was even occasionally used as a pinch-hitter, once during the World Series.

      LegoWhoNotesThatBarryPortrayedBatBarclay

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    16. Got Entree #7! Almost got the images mixed up, so I didn't quite get the connection at first. What is that one with the Dessert supposed to be?
      pjbThinksMaybeItMightHelpHimSolveThatOneBecauseRightNowHe'sGotNothing

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    17. Lip-smackin’ Dessert hint:
      The idiom impies that "you have almost accomplished something you had been striving for... but didn't quite get there."
      1. The 2-syllable boiled ‘n’ baked edible rhymes with a 3-syllable verb meaning to "achieve something by means of trickery or devious methods."
      2. The a noun that a geometer might use to characterize the edible’s shape rhymes with the name of a spider that "The Ox" wrote a song about.
      3. the adjective that geometer might use to describe the shape of a cool lip-smacking pastry rhymes with a word often paired with "gin."

      LeGinAndWhiskeyAGoGo

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    18. I can't believe it...finally....even after having all three of the right words (the last one only due to this latest clue), nothing would work out. Then suddenly, it hit me out of the blue...altho I had to check to make sure the letters actually made the phrase. What a relief.

      Delete
    19. And the Dessert has now been solved!
      pjbAlsoEmailedYouBack,Lego,SoCheckYourInbox!

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    20. I have to say that E7- after spending several hours working with a word that starts with an S, is kind of a standout.

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    21. Or is it donned a glove?Or Or hung up his glove, bat, or helmet?
      So confusing.

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    22. Three is first base? Who's on first? It's three. Who's on second? Not its four...etc. Who's on third??? LOL.

      Delete
  11. My hint for A3 would be Alice in Wonderland.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Schpuzzle: [stymied]

    Appetizers:
    1. Create & Cremate
    2. [stymied]
    3. A matter of time & A tatter of mime.

    S Slice: Sonata & (Frank) Sinatra

    Entrees:
    1. Ward Hartenstein & Eduard Einstein
    2. Coiffeur & Cuisine
    3. Jell; Marijuana (Reefer Madness) & "Well" (Jack Benny); Fajita & Hell; Hallelujah Chorus & Yell
    4. Diphthong
    5. QUIET (as in silent)
    6. Fiddle-dee-dee & Long Spoons; The words contain Fiddle and Spoons, typical folk music instruments
    7. Exile & Eggs Aisle

    Dessert: [stymied]

    Onward to Cryptic Friday!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I am happy to report the International committee has accepted my A2 alternate- Erk Riots. /ski resort. I give my humble thanks to the committee. Thankyou again.

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    2. What do they call the award? Oscar is taken. So is Emmy and so forth. There has to be a name when the IC pronounces.

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    3. I think it is classified? Perhaps Lego knows.

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    4. IHOFPA. International hall of fame puzzling awards. The IHOFPAS.

      Delete
  13. Schpuzzle of the Week: 3/15/22- Rain 45.

    The boys of October. World series date. 10/14/
    Skydiverting Appetizer:
    Wait for it.
    2. Alt. Ski resort- Erks Riots -( An erk is the lowest ranking person in RAF)
    3. A matter of time/ A tatter of mime.

    Soloist Slice:
    Sonata//Sinatra,
    ENTREE #1 Eduard Einsteins, Ward —Hardenstein
    ENTREE #2
    Coiffuer, Cuisine, Cuisinart
    ENTREE #3
    Jell/ Jello, Marijuana, Yell

    ENTREE #4
    Dipthong-
    ENTREE #5
    Wordy
    ENTREE #6
    Fiddledee.
    ENTREE #7
    Exile- // Eggs’aisle
    Lip-smackin’ Dessert:
    Pie in the sky. Knish, Pi,
    Pie in the sky.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Plantsmith's "Ski Resort/Erks Riots" is a very fine alternative answer to Skydiversion #2, IMHO. You can't beat any answer that involves the Royal Air Force!

      LegoAdds"AndILearnedANewWord(Erks!)"

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    2. Is that where Erkle came from?

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  14. SCHPUZZLE: THEY WERE ALL THIRD BASEMEN. 3 + 3+ 3 + 1 (to home?) = 10???? [Otherwise, there’s no hope for me here.]

    APPETIZERS:

    1. CREATE => CREMATE

    2. MOVIE THEATRE? [OVERHEAT TIME?], CINEMA? NIGHT CLUB?

    3. A MATTER OF TIME => A TATTER OF MIME

    SLICE: SONATA => SINATRA

    ENTREES:

    1. EDUARD EINSTEIN => WARD

    2. COIFFEUR & CUISINE

    3. (1) JELL [MARI(J)UANA; "REEFER MADNESS"] => WELL! [Jack Benny]
    (2) JELL [FA(J)ITA] => HELL
    (3) JELL [HALLELU(J)AH] => YELL

    4. DIPHTHONG

    5. QUIET

    6. FIDDLE-DEE-DEE; CHOPSTICKS => FIDDLESTICKS? [According to the Monday hint, 'Chopsticks' is wrong.]

    7. EXILE => EGGS AISLE [Pretty clever, I think!]

    DESSERT: => BAGEL [Before mention of ‘pastry’, I thought it was POTATO]; TORUS [Post-bagel, had this word before the latest clue]; CONIC [Had thought it was ’triangular’] => CLOSE BUT NO CIGAR !!

    ReplyDelete
  15. Schpuzzle: all 3 are MVP 3rd basemen

    Appetizers
    #1: SEEING – SEEMING (alt: TREBLE – TREMBLE)
    #2: ???
    #3: A MOMENT IN TIME → A TOMENT IN MIME

    Slice: SONATA, chg A to I, + R → SINATRA [post-Mon-hint]

    Entrées
    #1: EDUARD Einstein, WARD
    #2: COIFFEUR, CUISINE
    #3: CURE, FAJITA/QUAJITA, REEFER/QUEEFER, HALLELUJAH/QUALLELUJAH
    #4: DIPHTHONG
    #5: QUIET (= silent)
    #6: FIDDLEDEEDEE, LONG SPOONS. Both have a musical instrument name in the term.
    post-Mon-hint: FIDDLEDEEDEE, SOUPSPOONS.
    #7: EXILE → EGGS AISLE

    Dessert: ???

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. geofan,
      Your original answer to Entree #6 ("FIDDLEDEEDEE, LONG SPOONS. Both have a musical instrument name in the term") is not my intended answer, but your observation that both terms contain musical instruments is an excellent one! It is thus a very solid alternative solution.
      (And, it is true that, in the story, they were both "soupspoons" and "long spoons.")

      LegoFiddlin'AndSpoonin'

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  16. Before I begin, the latest on "Wheel of Fortune" this evening:
    The puzzle was RENTING A PEDAL BOAT. One contestant guessed PADDLE, not pedal. Another contestant bought an E, but said PADDLE for a second time. With the word showing as PEDA_, the third contestant spun the wheel and asked for an M, then I think it was another contestant who spun and asked for a W. Thank God someone finally got it right. But really---PEDAM? PEDAW? What is wrong with these people?! And how is Pat Sajak not bursting out laughing every time something like this has been happening?! After that they missed the toss-up puzzle(LATE BLOOMER), and one of them guessed BELLFLOWER for WALLFLOWER, but it wasn't as bad as PEDAM or PEDAW. There was also a team on "Tug of Words" who couldn't figure out "ooh"'s partner is AAH, and then couldn't get BAH as Scrooge's exclamation. I weep for this generation.
    Schpuzzle
    All three players had an association with Pie Traynor, another player. This was the only connection I could find.
    Appetizer Menu
    1. CREATE, CREMATE
    3. A MATTER OF TIME, A TATTER OF MIME
    Menu
    Soloist Slice
    SONATA, SINATRA
    Entrees
    1. EDUARD EINSTEIN, WARD HARTENSTEIN
    2. COIFFEUR, CUISINE
    3. JELL
    Part 1. MARIJUANA, "WELL!"(Jack Benny)
    Part 2. FAJITA, HELL
    Part 3. HALLELUJAH, YELL
    4. DIPHTHONG
    5. QUIET(They're all silent letters in the words.)
    6. FIDDLESTICKS, SOUPSPOONS(Both words contain musical instruments: FIDDLE and SPOONS.)
    7. EXILE, EGGS AISLE
    Dessert
    CLOSE BUT NO CIGAR
    Part 1. BAGEL
    Part 2. TORUS
    Part 3. CONIC
    In closing, if anyone here on this blog ever actually gets the chance to appear on "Wheel of Fortune", remember your mistakes will make you the laughingstock on social media. Just think of it as ANOTHER FEATHER IN YOUR MAP.-pjb

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    Replies
    1. Laughingstock on social media."Been there -done that". More than once. No problem.

      Delete
  17. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Pi-Day-3.14-Puzzle 2.0
    This week’s Schpuzzle of the Week involves Pi Day, which we celebrate this coming Monday, March 14, which is commonly written as 3/14. That has been designated Pi Day because 3-1-4 are the first three digits of pi.
    But why might Hall-of-Fame ballplayers Brooks Robinson, Mike Schmidt and George Brett wait until October 1 to celebrate Pi Day?
    Answer:
    Robinson, Schmidt and Brett are still-living Hall of Famers who played "THIRD BASE." The first four digits of pi written in "BASE 3" notation are 1-0-0-1. Those four digits, when written as a date, are 10/01, or October 1.

    Appetizer Menu

    Skydiverting Appetizer:
    Arts & Rec & “Mussy Marceau”
    1. Think of a six-letter word applicable to the arts. Insert an “M” in the exact middle and you will have another word that has an opposite meaning.
    What are these two words?
    Answer:
    Create & Cremate
    2. Think of a place you might go to for recreation in two words.
    Anagram the combined letters of those words to discover why you may not be able to use that place.
    What are this place and reason you may not be able to use it?
    Answer:
    Golf course & fog closure
    3. Take a common four-word phrase beginning with the article “A” followed by three words of six, two and four letters. Spoonerize the second and fourth words to describe a pantomimist in disheveled attire.
    What are this four-word phrase and description?
    Answer:
    A matter of time => A tatter of mime

    MENU

    Soloist Slice:
    “My Voice is my instrument!”
    Name a kind of composition that a soloist (like “ViolinTeddy,” for example) might play on an instrument.
    Change the second letter and add a letter near the end to spell the surname of a soloist whose voice is their instrument.
    What is this composition and who is this soloist?
    Answer
    Sonata; (Frank) Sinatra

    Lego...

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  18. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:

    Riffing Off Shortz And Hartenstein Slices:
    “EnChoiring” minds want to know... puzzle answers!
    ENTREE #1
    Take the first name of a close RELATIVE – indeed, the second son – of a noted physicist. The second syllable of the word, which contains four letters beginning with a vowel, sound like the first name of a puzzle-maker.
    Who are the puzzle-maker and son of the physicist?
    Hint #1: The first syllable of the physicist’s second son’s first name consists of two consecutive letters of the alphabet.
    Hint #2: The last six letters of the puzzle-maker’s surname are the same as the lest six letters in the surname of the physicist and his son.
    Answer:
    Ward Hartenstein; Eduard Einstein
    ENTREE #2
    Words starting with a “kw-” sound usually start with the letters “QU-,” as in question, or “KW-,” as in Kwanzaa. Name two common, uncapitalized non-English words (that do appear, however, in English dictionaries) that start with a “kw-” sound but do not start with the letters “QU-,” as in question, or “KW-,” as in Kwanzaa?
    Hint:
    The words are synonyms of “hairdresser” and “food.”
    Answer:
    Couffeur, Cuisine
    ENTREE #3
    WHY is pronunciation so darn tricky!
    Take a four-letter word that means “to set or become more solid.”
    1. Change the first letter to the letter it sounds like in the subject of a propaganda film starring actresses named Short and Miles. The result is an expression of exasperation oft voiced by a famous past violinist.
    2. Change the first letter to the letter it sounds like in a word for Tex-Mex cuisine that is etymologically rooted in “sash” or “belt.” The result is a pit of pandemonium.
    3. Change the first letter to the letter it sounds like in a Handel Chorus crooned by a Choir. The result is a hoot, howl or holler.
    What is the four-letter word that means “to set or become more solid?”
    What are the propaganda film subject and violinist’s expression?
    What are the Tex-Mex cuisine and pit of pandemonium?
    What is the Handel Chorus crooned by a Choir and the hoot, howl or holler?
    Answer:
    Jell; Marijuana, Well (Jack Benny's expression); Fajita, Hell; Hallelujah; Yell
    ENTREE #4
    Name a two-syllable nine-letter word that refers to two adjacent vowel sounds occurring within the same syllable – as in the words “hay” “boy” “out” and “noise.”
    The word contains seven consonants and two non-adjacent vowels.
    What is this word?
    Answer:
    Diphthong
    ENTREE #5
    Racquetball, Guitar, Juice, Vegetable, Wrestle.
    Take one letter from each of these five words that, in order, spell an adjective that describes each of those five letters.
    What is this five-letter word?
    Answer:
    Quiet (The "q" in Racquetball, the "u" in Guitar, the "i" in Juice, the second "e" in Vegetable and the "t" in Wrestle are all silent, or "quiet."

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  19. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    Riffing Off Shortz And Hartenstein Slices,continued:
    ENTREE #6
    The first word Scarlett O’Hara speaks in the 1939 film “Gone with the Wind,” based on Margaret Mitchell’s novel, is a 12-letter word that precedes “War, war, war!”
    A fable of uncertain origins involves a plural form of an eating utensil, in ten letters. The fable tells of a man who was given the opportunity to see what heaven and hell look like before he died. He finds that neither place has fire, brimstone and devils nor harps, clouds and angels. But both DO have greal banquet halls.
    What are these 12-letter and 10-letter words?
    What is notable about each of them?
    Answer:
    Fiddle-dee-dee, soupspoons;
    ("Fiddle-dee-dee" consists solely of letters in the first half of the alphabet; "soupspoons" consists solely of letters in the first half of the alphabet.)
    “Fiddle-dee-dee! War, war, war!” is Scarlett O'Hara's opening line in the 1939 film "Gone with the Wind."
    Soupspoons are the utensils in the fable.
    "Fiddle-dee-dee! War, war, war!" Scarlet O'Hara's opening line in Gone With the Wind.
    ENTREE #7
    Take a five-letter word associated with Moses.
    Now name a two-word caption for the image seen here, nine letters total, that is a homophone of that five-letter word.
    Answer:
    Exile; eggs aisle

    Dessert Menu

    Lip-smackin’ Dessert:
    Topological bake shop
    Name a four-word idiom that includes a word for
    something put between one’s lips.
    Anagram the combined letters of the idiom to spell:
    1. a boiled ‘n’ baked edible,
    2. a noun that a geometer might use to characterize that edible’s shape, and
    3. an adjective that geometer might use to describe the shape of a cool lip-smacking pastry.
    What are this idiom and three words?
    Answer:
    "Close but no cigar"; bagel, torus, conic

    Lego!

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