Thursday, November 2, 2023

eCoNoMiZaTioN, abbrs, weaponry, game show capital, anti-angelic choir, keep quiet! “...And ISLE try not to sing out of KEY!” A battle and an event involving cattle; “Throwing the book” at a crook; 24 hours and 54 flip-flops a day; Potables... Potent Perhaps?

 PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Potables... Potent Perhaps?

Remove consecutive letters from an appliance, one that makes a specific beverage. These removed letters spell a second beverage. 

The remaining letters are an anagram of a third beverage. 

These three beverages are the same color. 

Name the appliance, three beverages and the color.

Hint: The second and third beverages, if you change one letter, spell the name of a songwriter from Peru.

Appetizer Menu

WorldplayPennedByKenPratt Appetizer:

eCoNoMiZaTioN, abbrs, game show capital, weaponry, anti-angelic choir, keep quiet!

Vowel economization

1.★ A country’s name and its capital have the same number of letters. 

Each contains a single vowel, twice. 

What are this capital city and country?

Anti-angelic choir?

2. 👼We have all heard of the “angelic choir.” But in the nether regions, a corresponding body of singers has finally reached the culmination of its training. To which national capital does this successful conclusion point?

Game show capital

3.🎲 A national capital reminds one of a clip of a game  show host. What are the capital and game show host?

Keep quiet!

4. 💣Think of a word that includes bombs, artillery shells and the like. Add a vowel near the middle to yield a regulation that could prohibit storage of such items at a given location. What are the two words?

Weaponry

5. Replace one letter in a weapon to obtain a human body part that indirectly enables one to use this weapon. 

What are the weapon and body part?

Six abbrs

6. 🙈🙉🙊Think of six abbreviations, used without periods, that are associated with each other. Three of them are better-known than the other three. What are these abbreviations, and what do they stand for?

MENU

 “The MalDivas” Hors d’Oeuvre:

“...And ISLE try not to sing out of KEY!”

Think of a singer. Delete the space between the first and last names. 

Delete the fourth and fifth letters and the space they leave. Move the first letter to the end, so that it replaces the last letter.

Put a duplicate of the third letter where that first letter had been. 

The result is an island. 

Who is the singer? 

What is the island?

Bronco Busting Battle Slice:

A battle and an event involving cattle

Name a battle and an event that involves cattle, each in four words. 

Their second words are the same. 

They share a noun, singular in the battle, plural in the event. 

A word in the battle is the first syllable of a word in the event. 

What are this battle and event involving cattle?

Hint: Two of the eight words in the battle and event are the same word. Three of those seven different words appear – in plain sight – in the text of this puzzle!

Riffing Off Shortz And Bricker Slices:

24 hours and 54 flip-flops a day

Will Shortz’s October 29th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Jim Bricker of Wayland, Massachusetts, reads:

This week’s challenge is a little different from the usual. The time 6:29 on a digital clock, ignoring the colon, also reads 6:29 upside down. How many times in a day can a digital clock, ignoring the colon, read the same right side up as upside down? We are not accepting military time.

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Bricker Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Name three synonyms of “bawdy,” in six, four and four letters. 

Replace one of the four-letter synonyms with a homophone of the word it rhymes with in a traditional verse regarding a bride’s wedding-day wardrobe. 

Anagram the combined letters of this homophone and two other “bawdy synonyms” to spell the surname of a puzzle-maker and the city in which he lives.

Who is this puzzle-maker?

What are the three synonyms of “bawdy”?

ENTREE #2

You rest on your side in the fetal position, as is your nocturnal wont. On your bedside nightstand your digital clock rests, also on its side so that you can read it. (This 90-degree rotation is a nighttime ritual you perform before retiring.) One night, during a pre-dawn hour, your pet kitten named Smitten leaps upon the
bed and begins licking your cheek, waking you. “What time is it?” you wonder in your pre-dawn daze. Your eyes slowly open. Like nightmarish phantoms, the photons of your clock’s light-emitting diode come slowly into focus. What you perceive, however, is not a time. It is a word – a word apropos of your position. 

What is this word?

What is the time?

Why did you see the word, not the time?   

ENTREE #3

Name a commercial product that makes machinery perform better – a product inducted into the International Air & Space Hall of Fame at the San Diego Air & Space Museum. Write it in lowercase and turn it upside-down.

The result, if read aloud, will sound like a substance that makes people feel better – a substance that is obtained from what sounds like a “fatherly flower.”

What are this product and substance?

ENTREE #4

Take the third line of a well-known Robert Browning poem. Express it in just three characters. Reverse the order of these three characters and remove the colon. 

The result is another name for the main character in a 1965 spy film. When a woman asks this character, “Since you are here, would you mind giving me something to put on?” he hands her a pair of shoes. 

Turn the three-character name of the film’s main character upside down to spell the setting of this film scene.    

What is the Browning Poem and its third line?

What is the name for the main character in a 1965 spy film?

What is the setting of this film scene?

ENTREE #5

If you subtract one-third from one-third the result is zero. Five-sevenths minus five-sevenths also becomes zero.

If you invert one-third it becomes three. Five-
sevenths inverted becomes one-and-two-fifths.

Consider a larger number: 66,335,006.

Regardless of whether you subtract it or invert it, the answer is zero. 

How can this be?

ENTREE #6

A Christmas card sent by Noel Kit to his Uncle Leon Kit in Waretown, New Jersey “got lost in the mail” because young Noel wrote an incorrect fourth Zip Code digit on the envelope (which was really not like this fastidious lad). Indeed, it was an ironic Yuletide plot twist that one might liken to O Henry’s “Gift of the Magi.”

If you would go to the New Jersey dead letter office, sift through the ten-kilo bags of undelivered letters, find Noel’s Christmas card, then gaze upon that envelope upside down, the incorrect Zip Code would appear to be the first name of a title character created by a writer whose surname appears five times, in anagrammatical form, within the text of this puzzle.

What is the incorrect Zip Code that Noel wrote?

Who is the title character?

Who is  the writer who created that character?

Where in this puzzle does the writer’s name appear five times in anagrammatical form? 

ENTREE #7

Take the familiar first two words of the former name of a Houston-based petrochemical manufacturer. Write all but the second of the eight letters in uppercase. Look at the result upside down to see what appears to be two numbers of three and five digits. 

Divide the larger by the smaller, forming a three-digit quotient whose digits to the left of the decimal resemble three letters that can be arranged to spell a prefix, like “petro-”, that can precede “chemical.”

Subtract one from that quotient, then look at this result upside down to see three letters that can be rearranged to spell the second word in the former name of the Houston-based petrochemical manufacturer that we started out with!

What is this former name?

What numbers did you divide, and what quotient did you get?

What prefix, like “petro-”, can precede “chemical”?

After subtracting 1 and inverting, what three letters did you see that are an anagram of the former name of the Houston-based petrochemical manufacturer?

ENTREE #8

Name a pop group formed in 1958 with seven letters in its name. Capitalize all letters except for the middle one, and view the result upside down. You will see a string of seven digits. Four of them are the number of members in the group, one is a multiple of that number, and the sum of the other two digits ends in the
number of members in the group.

What is the name of the group?

What is the string of digits?

How many members are in the group?

ENTREE #9

We have scrawled down on a piece of loose-leaf notebook paper six nouns: five things seen at a certain place, and a sixth one that is heard there. The “certain place” contains four letters. 

We scrawled these six nouns in uppercase (except for any “g’s”, which we pencilled in lowercase) and, as best we could, in “block letters,” as might be seen on a seven-segment digital clock display. 

After that, we placed these six nouns in
alphabetical order.

Then we turned our loose-leaf paper upside down, and noticed that what we had written, when inverted, resembled six strings of numerical digits, ranging in length from four to seven digits. The string of digits furthest to the left was 7105; the string furthest to the right was 5338.

There were 29 digits in the six strings – including three 0’s, two 1’s, seven 3’s, seven 5’s, four 6’s, three 7’s and three 8’s. Curiously, there was nary a 2, 4 or 9 to be seen among the digits!

What is this four-letter place?

What are the five nouns seen there and the sixth noun heard there?

ENTREE #10

In the year 17 AD, the Roman poet Ovid died (not of co-vid) in the port city of Tomis, where he had been exiled by the dictator Emperor Augustus.

Rearrange the letters of 17 AD to spell the surname of a present-day dictator and a four-letter “operatic” noun that some have used to characterize him.

In the year 51 AD, the future Roman “reign-of-terrorist” Emperor Domitian was born.

Rearrange the letters of 51 AD to spell either the surname of a surrealist 20th-Century artist or a synonym of any one of the three faces that appear in perhaps his most persistently memorable painting. 

Who is the dictator and what is the “operatic” noun that some have used to characterize him?

Who is the artist and what is the synonym of a face?

Dessert Menu

“All the Buzz” Dessert:

“Throwing the book” at the crook

Name something, in two words, that a man temporarily released from jail might do that could lead to additional criminal charges against him. 

Replace the first word with a synonym. 

Switch the order of these words and spoonerize the result. 

The final result sounds like a natural phenomenon that was all the buzz near the end of the 20th Century.

What might a man do that could result in additional criminal charges?

What is this 20th-Century phenomenon?

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.

73 comments:

  1. Note -- the movie line in Entree 4 is not an exact quote ...

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  2. Thank you, Nodd. You know your spy films!

    LegoWhoHasNowReplacedHisParaphraseWithTheCorrectQuote

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  3. Happy Friday y'all(funny there's not too many people here so far)!
    Mom and I are fine. We didn't eat out tonight because Mia Kate is having a sleepover this evening, or she's gone to a sleepover at a friend's house, something like that. So all we really did was get me a much needed haircut, and lunch from Hardee's. Then Mom and I had both taken a nap, and she said she'd still get me supper from a drive-through even though she'd fixed her own, so I suggested Wendy's. We've also had a short power outage early this morning around 9:00am. Turns out we'd been late paying the electric bill, and they wasted no time in their response. Thank God my phone still had enough battery power Mom was able to pay them right then, and then within mere seconds they turned it all back on! Y'all could've been wondering what happened to me this evening because I'd be so late posting a comment! I immediately recharged my phone just in case God forbid we have another outage in the not-too-distant future. BTW Here's the results of my colonoscopy: Polyps, polyps, polyps! Pretty sure it has something to do with my tuberous sclerosis. Dr. Packer(his real name, oddly enough)said he burned off a few benign ones further down, but there are still a few that may be problematic, so he wants me to come back for a follow-up visit about two days before Thanksgiving(it was going to be the day before, but we already did that with Halloween). Currently I have to go visit my doctor who goes by her first name, Larissa, this coming Monday afternoon. Never a dull moment around here.
    Now I've got all my other puzzles done, and here I am, so let's look at my progress so far on this week's offerings:
    First of all, I haven't even checked the answer to this week's Sunday Puzzle challenge(which I didn't even attempt to try and solve in the first place), so I'm actually a bit surprised any of the Entrees were easy to get. Didn't get the Schpuzzle, got all Appetizers except #2(unsure), #5, and #6(don't even know where to begin), not the Hors d'Oeuvre but the Slice(surprisingly the only thing I didn't understand was the hint---everything else makes sense provided I have the right battle and event, but I don't see the "seven different words" of the eight total within the puzzle text), got all Entrees except #2, #5, and #9(though I have figured out in #1 that you've obviously used the wrong word/homophone in the bridal verse, otherwise the puzzlemaker/hometown anagram won't work, and then I also have to question the accuracy of the math in #7, even though I have all the words right), and I solved the Dessert(the easiest part was knowing the phenomenon at the end of the 20th Century right away, though, as I then had my doubts about the words in the phrase and the way to accurately spoonerize them to get said phenomenon---it's a very rare use of the word being used as a synonym/verb, IMHO). Looking forward to seeing many good hints between now and next Wednesday(from Lego and Ken).
    Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and let's hope none of us will experience another outage for a long time to come. Cranberry out!
    pjbWillNowCheckTheOfficialAnswerToThisWeek'sChallengeOnBlaine'sBlogWhileIt'sStillFreshOnHisMind

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    1. And have you tried the massive nacho burger? It looks--well...

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  4. THought I'd better check in. I DID get the Schpuzzle, last night, as well as ome of the Appetizers (1, possibly 2 butnot sure, 3 for sure, 5, and possibly more answers than necessary in 6, but they could be completely on the wrong track.

    That was as far as I got. So I ought to go start reading the Entrees, I suppose....but if a lot of them are about spy movies, I'm going to be 'out in the cold.'

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    1. I must have an Alt for 5 as i have never heard of such a weapon.

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    2. Frankly, I was surprised I managed to solve App 5.

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  5. It's taken me all this time (tho I wasted a lot failing on the Dessert), but I've worked through all the Entrees. My favorite was #6, until I arrived at #9, which was terribly clever, IMHO.

    Do I dare take a peek at the Slice?

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    1. The Slice wasn't so hard after all, but perhaps I just got lucky in that the cattle event 'hit' me.

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  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmlnO1EwCT4
    Don't try to figure it out.

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    1. Point guard sped around wild drunken sot (5,6)

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    2. Sadly, Youtube now sometimes seems to require us to remove Ad Blocker, which I refuse to do so I can't watch whatever your YOuTube link is, Paul (I tried)

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    3. I can't even click on the link because it's not even lit up to make that possible!
      pjbThinksIt'sProbablyAWasteOfAPerfectlyCleverCrypticClue

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    4. RA(FERAL+TSO)N => RAFER ALSTON, a point guard with the nickname "Skip to my Lou".
      I've heard of "skipping bail" or "jumping bail", but I can't recall ever hearing the phrase "hop bail".
      FIONA Volpe was discovered by 007 in the LOO in "Thunderball".
      Marshall Applewhite and his followers had a peculiar interest in a certain comet around the turn of the millennium.
      The Youtube link was supposed to point to FIONA APPLE's cover version of "Across the Universe".

      I got the Schpuzzle this morning after reading the hint. Made me think of the barber who cut my hair when I was a kid; his name was Porter Black.

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    5. I enjoyed the Fiona video which i had not seen. I had forgotten what a great artist she is. There were some negative comments about , "Sticking one's head in the sand in times of turmoil," but really if you are going to be a peacemaker you have to start from a calm and peaceful center. Thich Naht Hahn has written of this many times. He has a lot to teach us.

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  7. Hi, everyone. Got everything but Apps #2 (think I might be on the right track with the capital, but can't see how the phrase works), #5, #6 (have an alt, but at least one abbreviation uses a period), Hors d'Oeuvre (tried a bunch of singers/islands, but nothing works), and Entree #2 (only a few digits look like letters on the side, but can't get word relating to position out of this).

    Any hints would be appreciated!

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    1. Not sure, but I think App #2's reference to "culmination of their training" may have to do with one of the subtitles for the Hors d'Oeuvre. My possible answer has three words and requires some punctuation to sound (pretty much) like the capital.

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    2. Tortie, I also had to try a bunch of singers for the Hors D'O, until my eye finally fell on the right island....then I knew who the singer had to be. Hopefully, you realize something about letters 1 and 3 of the island (that's my hint.)

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    3. Hints for Entree #2 -- consider why the word "rest" appears in the first sentence, instead of a different word. Also, it would be particularly appropriate in view of the time if the clock display were green.

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    5. Nodd, I am now wondering if we obtained completely different solutions to Entree 2?

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    6. OK, solved App #2 and the Hors d'Oeuvre. Still haven't tried to solve Entree #2 again.

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  8. Maybe I've missed something, but it seems to me "7015" in Entree #9 would work better if it were "7105." Otherwise, it seems extremely obscure.

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    1. Hmm. yes, I seem to have done that myself when solving, without realizing it (7105).

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    2. VT, I did the same thing. I'm going to assume the 7105 is the right answer, as I couldn't even find a definition for 7015.

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    3. I found a definition, but it's an Irish word!

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  9. Lego, need a hint for Dessert. It is driving me bonkers!

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    1. VT, one of the words rhymes with "jail."

      I still don't have Entree #2, nor Apps #5 or 6.

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    2. Tortie, for Entree #2 try a holiday in March. I don't have Apps 5 or 6 either, nor the Hors d'Oeuvre or Entree #5.

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    3. Nodd, for the Hors d’Oeuvre, the island is American, and the singer is a popular 1970s country music singer.

      For Entree #5, think of a different kind of inversion.

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    4. Many thanks, Tortie -- your hints got me both answers I needed.

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    5. Tortie, for App #5, the two words rhyme with the two words of a 1960's international competition that I recall was used in a Lego puzzle not too long ago.

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    6. Thank you, Tortie....once I figured the rhyming word out (which wasn't too hard), then it wa sjust a matter of getting the right synonym for the other word....which took a few tries. I hadn't even considered the resultant "event" was even a thing ...instead, I had been focusing entirely on Y2K!!

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    7. Nodd and Tortie: from your clue, Nodd, I can only surmise that I have a different answer from yours. The hint *I* had planned to give Tortie was that the word "fetal" was important.

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    8. Oops, I forgot to indicate I was referring to Entree 2.

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    9. I too tried to do something with Y2K("kite away"?). Other than that, I can't think of any other big "event" at the end of the 20th Century. I have solved the Hors d'Oeuvre, thanks in large part to Tortie's narrowing down of the genre.
      pjbAlsoFoundOut,WithSlightlyDifferentDirections,"MelTillis"CanBeChangedTo"Ellis"

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    10. PJB, I wasn't sure from the above if it meant you hadn't yet solved the Dessert; I NEVER would have thought of the 20th century event, so don't even try. Go for Tortie's hint about the word rhyming with 'jail'....and just play it through.

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    11. PJB, remember the 20th Century "event" was a natural phenomenon. It came around for about a year and a half.

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    12. The Dessert event had an indirect but unfortunate connection with "Star Trek."

      I think I have an answer for Entree #2 now. Will work on App #5 now that I have Nodd's hint.

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  11. Are all of you entering the NPR contest? Normally, I just do the puzzles for my own sake and don't send in the answers, but it feels kind of silly to not send in anything to NPR for this one.

    pjb, I saw some of your acrostics on Blaine's blog. I don't know if those were your submissions, but you have a real gift for this sort of thing, as do some of the other people there. My submissions (so far -- may wind up changing some of this) are more convoluted. I will mention that I'm pretty much staying away from politics!

    I have to admit that I was a bit sour on the NPR puzzle after last week's "gotcha" loophole. Congrats to the solvers who figured it out. But it's kind of annoying to spend time weeding through and eliminating answers (and then remembering to multiply by 2) only to still have it wrong.

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    1. Tortie, I think you should submit your answers to NPR and then post them too, after the deadline. It's a lot of fun to see the creative ideas that people come up with. My experience with these creative challenges is that entries are judged primarily on "naturalness of syntax," one of Shortz's favorite phrases, even though other criteria are listed too.

      I was more than a bit sour about last week. NPR issued a puzzle and set a deadline. They evaluated the entries on the deadline to see which were correct so they could call the "winner." On the deadline, 54 was correct. Then, four days later, they gave a different answer which was only correct on the day the puzzle aired, not on the submission/evaluation date. To top it off, they never indicated or even hinted in the puzzle that entries would be evaluated as of the air date. I consider this no more than a cheap trick and unworthy of NPR.

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    2. I think you are right about "naturalness of syntax.." My entries so far are a bit lacking in that area. They're also mostly lacking in humor, although I suspect that isn't very important. I've noticed that pjb and others have mastered the "naturalness of syntax" skill. I'll continue to tweak further.

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  12. Tuesday Evening Hints:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    The songwriter was born in Peru, Indiana.

    Appetizer Menu
    All hints are courtesy of geofan (Ken Pratt). We thank him.
    1. Both the country and its capital have 5 letters. The single vowel is an A.
    2. It is finished.
    3. Rio de la Plata.
    4. The vowel added to the first word, in an ace, is an I. The regulation is generally municipal.
    5. In some US dialects, both words are pronounced similarly.
    6. Pronounced as a word, each of us has committed a homograph of the best-known of the six. Another is an a type of play. One sounds like something one can obtain at a beach. One, spelled out, rhymes with a well-known DC-area organization. The final two, each pronounced as a word, are a homophone of what a prospector, philosopher, or researcher does; and a type of bed.

    “The MalDivas” Hors d’Oeuvre
    The island is a popular rhyming word in may limericks

    Bronco Busting Battle Slice:
    Chi-town cager

    Riffing Off Shortz And Bricker Slices:
    ENTREE #1
    Three synonyms of “bawdy”:
    a color;
    a word that begins a bone that Adam had and ends with a word for a treadless tire;
    a lacy rhyme.
    ENTREE #2
    Your alarm clock was fibbing!
    ENTREE #3
    The “fatherly flower” is a poppy.
    ENTREE #4
    "...
    God’s in His heaven—
    All’s right with the world!

    ENTREE #5
    Rich "Goose" Gossage pitched scores of scoreless innings.
    ENTREE #6
    J.J.R. ...;
    ENTREE #7
    The familiar first two words of the former name of a Houston-based petrochemical manufacturer contain a greeting within.
    ENTREE #8
    A "Gibby" pop group
    ENTREE #9
    MacDonald
    ENTREE #10
    Remember this is a Roman poet and Roman “reign-of-terrorist.”
    “All the Buzz” Dessert:
    Nathan ____ + be___

    LegoHinterlander

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    1. That takes care of the Schpuzzle and the Dessert. Doesn't get me any further with the Appetizers or Entrees I couldn't solve, though.
      pjbMustThankTortieForHerKindWordsRegardingHisEffortsWithTheCurrentTwo-WeekChallenge(Wasn'tSureHe'dComeUpWithAnythingGoodAtFirst!)

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    2. Yes very good ones PJB. I wonder if it is three total or three per week?

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    3. All footballers love Alabama completely. Who could it be now?

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    4. pjb, you're welcome! I think I liked your Memphis acrostic the best.

      I am reasonably happy with my entrees (still tweaking, so not submitted yet!). I doubt they will win, though, after seeing other offerings.

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  14. Thanks to geofan, I finally got App #6. Given the number of abbreviations currently in use, I'm sure I could not have solved it without the hints, except maybe with a very lucky guess as to the subject that the abbreviations relate to.

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  15. Yes, thanks to geo, I finally got App 4. The first word was something I recognized after looking up the municipal word, given that my mom worked for years at an arsenal in NJ.

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  16. I have been having trouble understanding most of Nodd's hints about App 5....I think my answer is correct, and it doesn't at all follow Nodd's hints about it. Does work with geo's hint, however.

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    1. Perhaps mine is an alternate, then. I'll have to give it more thought.

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    2. Same here, although my answer doesn't seem to really work with geo's hint, either.

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    3. Yes, that's true of mine too. My answer changes the first letter, so I don't see how people could pronounce the two words the same. I still like the answer, though, as an alternate.

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  17. Thank you, Lego and geofan. I have App #6 now and verified Entree #2. I did finally come up with an answer for App #5, but I don't think it fits the hints.

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  18. SCHPUZZLE: PERCOLATOR makes COFFEE => COLA; PORTER (style of brown beer) ; Songwriter: COLE PORTER

    APPETIZERS:

    1. ACCRA, GHANA

    2. HELSINKI, FINLAND

    3. MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay => MONTY HALL

    4. ORDNANCE & “I” => ORDINANCE

    5. FIREARM => FOREARM

    6. IN, FT, YD, MPH, KM, KT [Knots], i.e. all distance measurements. [I don’t think these answers fit with geo’s hint.]


    HORS D’O, pre-hint: TANYA TUCKER => NANTUCKET


    SLICE, pre-hint: BATTLE OF BULL RUN; RUNNING OF THE BULLS


    ENTREES, all pre-hint:

    1. RIBALD, RACY , BLUE/KNEW => {Jim} BRICKER, WAYLAND

    2. MOM, i.e. 3:03 tilted on end , starting from the left

    3. WD-40 => ohpm => OPIUM

    4. Pippa’s Song => MORNING’S AT SEVEN => 7:00 => 007 => LOO

    5. Upside down on a calculator: g00SEEgg => GOOSE EGG

    6. WARETOWN ZIP CODE: 08758 => Incorrect Zip: 08718 => BILBO BAGGINS; TOLKIEN => NOEL KIT, LEON KIT, NOT LIKE, LIKEN TO, TEN-KILO

    7. ShELL OIL => 710 77345; 77345/710 => 108.9366 => IOB => BIO-; 107 => LOI => OIL

    8. BEE gEES => 5336338; THREE members: Barry, Maurice and Robin

    9. FARM => BEES, Eggs, gEESE, gOBBLES, SILOS, SOIL

    10: XVII AD => XI DIVA; LI AD => DALI or DIAL


    DESSERT: JUMP BAIL => HOP BAIL => BAIL HOP => HAIL BOP => HALE - BOPP comet

    ReplyDelete
  19. SCHPUZZLE – PERCOLATOR; COFFEE, COLA, PORTER; DARK BROWN (HINT – COLE PORTER)
    APPETIZERS
    1. ACCRA, GHANA
    2. HELSINKI – HELL’S IN KEY
    3. MONTEVIDEO; MONTY HALL
    4. ORDNANCE; ORDINANCE
    5. (?) ALTERNATES: MACE, FACE (puzzle does not require the body part belong to the weapon’s user); BULLET, GULLET (necessary to ingest food so “indirectly” enables use of weapons)
    6. SIN [SINE]; COS [COSINE]; TAN [TANGENT]; CSC [COSECANT]; SEC [SECANT]; COT [COTANGENT]
    HORS D’OEUVRE – TANYA TUCKER; NANTUCKET
    SLICE – BATTLE OF BULL RUN; RUNNING OF THE BULLS (HINT – BATTLE, THE, OF)
    ENTREES
    1. (JIM) BRICKER, WAYLAND; RIBALD, RACY, BLUE
    2. “LIE”; 3:17; THE DISPLAY WAS INVERTED.
    3. WD-40; OPIUM
    4. PIPPA’S SONG; “MORNING’S AT SEVEN”; 007; LOO
    5. 66,335,006 INVERTED SPELLS “GOOSE EGG”
    6. 08718; BILBO; J.R.R. TOLKIEN; NOEL KIT, LEON KIT, “NOT LIKE”, “LIKEN TO”, “TEN-KILO”
    7. SHELL OIL; 77345/710 = 108; BIO; LOI
    8. BEE GEES; 5336338; THREE
    9. FARM; SIOL [SOIL?], GEESE, EGGS, BEES, SILOS, GOBBLES
    10. XI JINPING, DIVA; DALI, DIAL
    DESSERT – JUMP BAIL; HALE-BOPP

    ReplyDelete
  20. Schpuzzle: PERCOLATOR, COFFEE, COLA, PORTER, BROWN (Hint: COLE PORTER, Peru, Indiana)
    App:
    1. ACCRA, GHANA
    2. HELSINKI (HELL’S IN KEY; got confused on this because I was thinking HELL’S INKY, which is better for art or writing)
    3. MONTEVIDEO (Monty (Hall) video)
    4. ORDNANCE; ORDINANCE
    5. FIREARM, FOREARM (doesn’t seem to match hints, however)
    6. (Post hint:) SIN, COS, TAN, SEC, CSC, COT; all are trigonometric functions (Alt:, since DR usually uses a period: DR (doctor), MD (medical doctor), RN (registered nurse), DO (osteopathic doctor), OD (doctor of optometry), DC (doctor of chiropractic))
    Hors d’Oeuvre: TANYA TUCKER, NANTUCKET
    Slice: BATTLE OF BULL RUN; RUNNING OF THE BULLS
    Entrees:
    1. JIM BRICKER (from WAYLAND); RIBALD, RACY, BLUE (-> NEW -> KNEW)
    2. LIE, 3:17, Smitten knocked the clock over so it read upside down
    3. WD40 (wd40 -> ohpm ->), OPIUM (poppy)
    4. PIPPA PASSES, MORNING’S AT SEVEN (7:00), 007, LOO
    5. 66335006 - 66335006 = 0; 66335006 inverted on calculator = GOOSE EGG
    6. 08718; BILBO (Baggins), TOLKIEN; NOEL KIT, LEON KIT, NOT LIKE, LIKEN TO, TEN-KILO
    7. SHELL OIL; 77345/710=108.9366; BIO, (108-1 -> 107 -> invert) IOL (-> OIL)
    8. BEE GEES; (upside down) 5336338; THREE (actually FIVE in their earlier days!) (multiple = 6; sum=13)
    9. FARM; BEES, EGGS, GEESE, SILO, SOIL (s/b 7105), GOBBLES
    10. (XVII AD) XI, DIVA; (LI AD) DALI, DIAL
    Dessert: JUMP BAIL (-> HOP BAIL -> BAIL HOP -> HAIL BOP); HALE-BOPP (Unfortunate, indirect “Star Trek” connection: Nichelle Nichols’ brother was part of the Heaven’s Gate cult. Members were waiting for the Hale-Bopp comet.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Gosh, Tortie , I had never heard that about Nichelle NIchols' brother...sad.

      Delete
  21. geofan took a break from puzzle-solving this week, as he was working on his woman friend's Czech genealogy. Intense work: records in Czech, German (Kurrentschrift), and Latin.

    He made a Christmas present from the results, all in Czech. Her family name means "lily of the valley".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree with ViolinTeddy, geofan... beautiful.

      LegoNotesThatgeofanContributedAGreatDealToThisWeek'sPuzzleria!WithHisSixExcellentPuzzles!

      Delete
  22. 11- 8-23, 80 degrees in November?

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Percolator, Cola, porter, coffee
    Cole Porter, Peru Indiana

    Appetizer Menu

    1. Ghana,Acccra
    2. Helsinki, Hells in key
    3. Montevideo, Uruguay
    4. Ordnance- ordinance
    5. Rung- “some kind of cudgel” -lung . New meaning for Ring your bell-past tense.
    6.TAN, take a nap, bunc-Back up net control, Dig- do it girl,
    Computer- chat phrases.

    “The MalDivas” Hors d’Oeuvre
    Tanya Tucker— XYY– Nantucket

    Bronco Busting Battle Slice:
    Michael Jordan.

    Riffing Off Shortz And Bricker Slices:
    ENTREE #1
    Jim Bricker, Wayland
    Ribald, Carmine,twy
    ENTREE #2
    Lie- 3:17 , clock is upside down.
    ENTREE #3
    W-D 40, Opium
    ENTREE #4
    "ENTREE #5

    ENTREE #6

    ENTREE #7
    ENTREE #8
    BEEGEES, 5336338, 3 original members

    ENTREE

    “All the Buzz” Dessert:
    Skip bail,, hop bail, bail hop Hail Bop, Hale Bop comet

    ReplyDelete
  23. Schpuzzle
    PERCOLATOR, COFFEE, COLA, PORTER, COLE PORTER
    Appetizer Menu
    1. JAPAN, TOKYO
    2. HELSINKI(HELL'S IN KEY)
    3. MONTEVIDEO(MONTY[HALL]VIDEO)
    4. ORDNANCE, ORDINANCE
    5. I like FIREARM/FOREARM myself.
    Menu
    "The MalDivas" Hors d'Oeuvre
    TANYA TUCKER, NANTUCKET
    Bronco Busting Battle Slice
    BATTLE OF BULL RUN(Civil War), RUNNING OF THE BULLS(Pamplona)
    Entrees
    1. RIBALD, RACY, BLUE; JIM BRICKER, WAYLAND(MA); The anagram for BRICKER/WAYLAND requires KNEW for NEW in "something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue", not BLEW for BLUE.
    2. 3:17, LIE; Smitten knocked the clock over, making it read upside down.
    3. WD40, ohpm(OPIUM)
    4. "Morning's at seven"("Pippa's Song")=7:00, 007(James Bond), LOO(British term for "toilet" or "bathroom")
    5. 66,335,006 upside down spells GOOSEEGG(slang for "zero").
    6. 08718=BILBO(Baggins, "The Hobbit"), (J. R. R.)TOLKIEN; Anagrams for TOLKIEN, in order: NOEL KIT, LEON KIT, NOT LIKE, LIKEN TO, and TEN-KILO.
    7. 71077345=SHELLOIL, 018(BIO)-1=017(OIL)
    8. BEEGEES=5336338(3 members in the group, 6 is a multiple of 3, and 5+8=13.)
    9. FARM; BEES(5338), EGGS(5663), GEESE(35336), GOBBLES(5378806), SILO(0715), SOIL(7105)
    10. 17 AD=XVII AD=XI(Jinping, President of China), DIVA; 51 AD=LI AD=(Salvador)DALI, DIAL(The faces resemble clocks.)
    Dessert Menu
    "All The Buzz"
    JUMP BAIL, HOP BAIL=HALE-BOPP(comet)
    Masked Singer Results:
    HIBISCUS=LUANN DE LESSEPS(one of those "Real Housewives" neither Mom nor I know)
    ANTEATER goes on to next week's "Troll Night".
    Jenny McCarthy-Wahlberg correctly guessed Luann. Ken Jeong's winning streak appears to be through. Still comes as a shock to us.
    Regarding the two-week creative challenge: If I come up with any more good acrostics, I'll most likely submit a few more and post some of the best ones over at Blaine's, so you're sure to see them if you check. If anyone else here has any good ideas of their own for the challenge, please don't hesitate to send them in, or let Blaine and Co. know about it, or both.-pjb

    ReplyDelete
  24. This Week's Official Answers For the Record, Part 1:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Potables... Potent Perhaps?
    Consecutive letters of a beverage-making appliance spell a second beverage.
    The remaining letters are an anagram of a third beverage.
    These three beverages are the same color.
    Name the appliance, three beverages and color.
    Hint: The second and third beverages, if you change one letter, spell the name of a songwriter from Peru.
    ANSWER:
    Percolator (Coffee maker); Cola; Porter; dark brown
    PERCOLATOR => COLA+PER+TOR => COLA+PORTER
    Optional Hint: Cole Porter was born in Peru, Indiana

    Appetizer Menu
    WorldplayPennedByKen Appetizer:
    eCoNoMiZaTioN, abbrs, game show capital, weaponry, anti-angelic choir, keep quiet!
    keep quiet!
    Vowel economization
    1. A country’s name and its capital have the same number of letters. Each contains a single vowel, twice. What are this capital city and country?
    Answer:
    ACCRA, GHANA

    Anti-angelic choir?
    2. We have all heard of the “angelic choir.” But in the nether regions, a corresponding body of singers has finally reached the culmination of its training. To which national capital does this successful conclusion point?
    Answer:
    HELSINKI (“HELL'S IN KEY.”)

    Game show capital
    3. A national capital reminds one of a clip of a game show host. What are the capital and game show host?
    Answer:
    MONTEVIDEO, MONTE HALL

    Keep quiet!
    4. Think of a word that includes bombs, artillery shells and the like. Add a vowel near the middle to yield a regulation that could prohibit storage of such items at a given location. What are the two words?
    Answer:
    ORDNANCE, ORDINANCE

    Weaponry
    5. Replace one letter in a weapon to obtain a human body part that indirectly enables one to use this weapon. What are the weapon and body part?
    Answer:
    FIREARM, FOREARM

    Six abbrs
    6. Think of six abbreviations, used without periods, that are associated with each other. Three of them are better-known than the other three. What are these abbreviations, and what do they stand for?
    Answer:
    SIN, COS, TAN, CSC, SEC, COT – trigonometric functions

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  25. This Week's Official Answers For the Record, Part 2:

    MENU
    “The MalDivas” Hors d’Oeuvre
    “...And ISLE try not to sing out of KEY”
    Think of a singer. Delete the space between the first and last names.
    Delete the fourth and fifth letters and the space they leave.
    Replace the last letter with the first letter.
    Put a duplicate of the third letter where that first letter had been.
    The result is an island.
    Who is the singer?
    What is the island?
    Answer:
    Tanya Tucker; Nantucket
    TANYA TUCKER=>TANYATUCKER=>TANTUCKER=>ANTUCKET=>NANTUCKET

    Broco Busting Battle Slice:
    A battle and an event involving cattle
    Name a battle and an event that involves cattle, each in four words.
    Their second words are the same.
    They share a noun, singular in the battle, plural in the event.
    A word in the battle is the first syllable of a word in the event.
    What are this battle and event involving cattle?
    Hint: Two of the eight words in the battle and event are the same word. Three of those SEVEN DIFFERENT words appear – in plain sight – in the text of the puzzle!
    Answer:
    Battle of Bull Run; Running of the Bulls
    Hint: BATTLE, OF and THE appear in the puzzle text; BULL, RUN, RUNNING and BULLS do not appear in the text.

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  26. This Week's Official Answers For the Record, Part 3:

    Riffing Off Shortz And Bricker Slices:
    24 hours and 54 flip-flops a day
    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Bricker Slices read:
    ENTREE #1
    Name three synonyms of “bawdy,” in six, four and four letters. Replace one of the four-letter synonyms with a homophone of the word it rhymes with in a traditional verse regarding a bride’s wedding-day wardrobe. Anagram the combined letters of this homophone and two remaining “bawdy synonyms” to spell the surname of a puzzle-maker and the city in which he lives.
    Who is this puzzle-maker?
    What are the three synonyms of “bawdy”?
    Answer:
    (Jim) Bricker of Wayland, (Massachusetts); Ribald, Racy, Blue (which rhymes with "new," a homophone of "knew")
    RIBALD+RACY+KNEW = BRICKER+WAYLAND
    Something old,
    something new,
    something borrowed,
    something blue,
    and a [silver] sixpence in her shoe.
    ENTREE #2
    You rest on your side in the fetal position, as is your nocturnal wont. On your bedside nightstand your digital clock rests, also on its side so that you can read it (This 90-degree rotation is a nocturnal ritual you perform before retiring.) One night, during a pre-dawn hour, your pet kitten named Smitten leaps upon the bed an begins licking your cheek, waking you. “What time is it?” you wonder in your nighttime daze. Your eyes slowly open. Like nightmarish phantoms, the photons of your clock’s light-emitting diode come slowly into focus. What you perceive, however, is not a time. It is a word – a word apropos of your position.
    What is this word?
    What is the time?
    Why did you see the word, not the time?
    Answer:
    LIE; 3:17; Before retiring, you mistakenly flipped your clock 90 degrees clockwise rather than 90 degrees counter-clockwise... Not wise!
    ENTREE #3
    Name a commercial product that makes machinery perform better – a product inducted into the International Air & Space Hall of Fame at the San Diego Air & Space Museum. Turn it upside-down.
    The result, if read aloud, will sound like a substance that makes people feel better – a substance that is obtained from what sounds like a “fatherly flower.”
    What are this product and substance?
    Answer:
    WD-40, or wd-40; Opium (Oh-pm)

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  27. This Week's Official Answers For the Record, Part 4:
    ENTREE #4
    Take the third line of of a well-known Robert Browning poem. Express it in just three characters. Reverse their order and remove the colon. The result is a name for the main character in a 1965 spy film. When a woman asks this character, “Give something to wear,” he hands her a pair of shoes. Turn the three-character name of the film’s main character upside down to spell the setting of this film scene.
    What is the Browning Poem and its third line?
    What is the name for the main character in a 1965 spy film?
    What is the setting of this film scene?
    Answer:
    "Pippa's Song"
    The year ’s at the spring,
    And day ’s at the morn;
    MORNING’S AT SEVEN; (7:00 am)
    The hill-side ’s dew-pearl'd;
    The lark ’s on the wing;
    The snail ’s on the thorn;
    God ’s in His heaven—
    All ’s right with the world!
    ;
    007 (James Bond, in "Thunderball"); Loo (British for "Bathroom")
    ENTREE #5
    If you subtract one-third from one-third the result is zero. Five-sevenths minus five-sevenths also becomes zero.
    If you invert one-third it becomes three. Five-sevenths inverted becomes one-and-two-fifths.
    Consider a larger number: 66,335,006.
    Regardless of whether you subtract it or invert it, the answer is zero.
    Yet the graphic accompanying this puzzle text seems to belie that statement, claiming that inverting 66,335,006, albeit small, is still greater than zero.
    How can this be?
    How can the inversion of 66,335,009 equal zero? Please exclain this apparent paradox.
    Answer:
    66,335,006 – 66,335,006 = 0
    66,335,006, inverted, looks like gOOSE Egg, which is a synonym of "zero"
    ENTREE #6
    A Christmas card sent by Noel Kit to his Uncle Leon Kit in Waretown, New Jersey “got lost in the mail” because young Noel wrote an incorrect fourth Zip Code digit on the envelope, which was really not like the fastidious lad. It was an ironic Yuletide plot twist that one might liken to O Henry’s “Gift of the Magi.”
    If you would go to the New Jersey dead letter office, sift through the ten-kilo bags of undelivered letters, find Noel’s Christmas card, then gaze upon that envelope upside down, the incorrect Zip Code would appear to be the first name of a title character created by a writer whose surname appears five times, in anagrammatical form, within the text of this puzzle.
    What is the incorrect Zip Code Noel wrote?
    Who is the title character?
    Who is the writer who created that character?
    Where does the writer’s name appear five times in anagrammatical form?
    Answer:
    08718 (not the correct 08758 Zip Code for Waretown); Bilbo (Baggins); J.J.R. Tolkien;
    1. Noel Kit 2. Leon Kit 3. "not like" 4. "liken to" 5. ten-kilo

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  28. This Week's Official Answers For the Record, Part 5:
    ENTREE #7
    Take the familiar first two words of the former name of a Houston-based petrochemical manufacturer. Look at the words upside down to see what appears to be two numbers of three and five digits. Divide the larger by the smaller, forming a three-digit quotient whose digits to the left of the decimal resemble three letters that can be arranged to spell a prefix, like “petro-”, that can precede “chemical.”
    Subtract one from that quotient, then look at this result upside down to see three letters that can be rearranged to spell the second word in the former name of the Houston-based petrochemical manufacturer that we started out with!
    What is this former name?
    What numbers did you divide, and what quotient did you get?
    What prefix, like “petro-”, can precede “chemical”?
    After subtracting 1 and inverting, what three letters did you see?
    Answer:
    Shell Oil (now "Shell USA, Inc."); 710 and 77,345, 108.9...; BIO(chemical); LOI, which are an anagram of "OIL"
    ShELL OIL (inverted) => 710 77345; 77345 divided by 710 = 108.9...; 108 => IOB => BIO(chemical); 107 (inverted) => LOI => OIL
    ENTREE #8
    Name a pop group formed in 1958 with seven letters in its name. Capitalize all letters except for the middle one, and view the result upside down. You will see a string of seven digits. Four of them are the number of members in the group, one is a multiple of that number, and the sum of the other two digits ends in the number of members in the group.
    What is the name of the group?
    What is the string of digits?
    How many members are in the group?
    Answer:
    Bee Gees BEEgEES; 5336338; three
    BEEgEES inverted = 5336338
    ENTREE #9
    We have written down on a piece of loose-leaf notebook paper six nouns: five things seen at a certain place, and a sixth one that is heard there. The “certain place” contains four letters.
    We wrote these six nouns in uppercase (except for any “g’s”, which we wrote in lowercase) and, as best we could, in “block letters,” as might be seen on a seven-segment digital clock display.
    After that, we placed these six nouns in alphabetical order.
    Then we turned our loose-leaf paper upside down, and noticed that what we had written, when inverted, resembled six strings of numerical digits, ranging in length from four to seven letters. The string of digits furthest to the left was 7105; the string furthest to the right was 5338.
    There were 29 digits in the six strings – including three 0’s, two 1’s, seven 3’s, seven 5’s, four 6’s, three 7’s and three 8’s. Curiously, there was nary a 2, 4 or 9 to be seen among the digits!
    What is this four-letter place?
    What are the five nouns seen there and the sixth noun heard there?
    Answer:
    Farm; Bees, Eggs, Geese, Silos, Soil and Gobbles
    BEES, EggS, gEESE, gOBBLES SILOS, SOIL,
    5338, 5663, 35336, 5378806, 50715, 7105

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  29. This Week's Official Answers For the Record, Part 6:
    ENTREE #10
    In the year 17 AD, the Roman poet Ovid died (not of co-vid) in the port city of Tomis, where he had been exiled by the the dictator Emperor Augustus.
    Rearrange the letters of 17 AD to spell the surname of a present-day dictator and a four-letter “operatic” noun that some have used to characterize him.
    In the year 51 AD, the future Roman “reign-of-terrorist” Emperor Domitian was born.
    Rearrange the letters of 51 AD to spell either the surname of a surrealist 20th-Century artist or a synonym of any one of the three faces that appear in perhaps his most persistently memorable painting.
    Who is the the dictator and what is the “operatic” noun that some have used to characterize him?
    Who is the artist as what is the synonym of a face?
    Answer:
    Chinese President Xi Jinping; Diva
    (Salvador) Dali; Dial
    17 AD = XVII AD = XI + DIVA
    51 AD = LI AD = DALI = DIAL

    Dessert Menu
    “All the Buzz” Dessert:
    “Throwing the book” at the crook
    Name something, in two words, that a man temporarily released from jail might do that could lead to additional criminal charges against him.
    Replace the first word with a synonym.
    Switch the order of the these words and spoonerize the result.
    The final result sounds like a natural phenomenon that was all the buzz near the end of the 20th Century.
    What might a man do that could result in additional criminal charges?
    What is this 20th-Century phenomenon?
    Answer:
    Jump Bail ("Hop" Bail)
    Hale-Bopp (a bright comet that passed by Earth in the 1990s)
    JUMP BAIL=>HOP BAIL=>BAIL HOP=>HAIL BOP=>HALE-BOPP

    Lego!

    ReplyDelete