Thursday, October 10, 2024

Literarily Speaking Parts 1&2, Political Name-Calling, Spoonerizing Stars, Poetry Corner, Initial Impressions; Palindrome, gland & New England; A pair of parts and apparitions; Flippin’ through Merriam-Webster; Silver screen, Mandalorian steel; Sweet-but-healthful Heath Bar?

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Flippin’ through Merriam-Webster

Print a four-syllable noun in lowercase letters. 

Flip one of its letters 180-degrees along its x-axis. 

The result is the three-syllable noun that is the second word in the four-syllable noun’s Merriam-Webster Dictionary definition. 

What are these two words? 

Appetizer Menu

“Nodding Approval” Appetizer:

Poetry Corner, Spoonerizing Stars, Political Name-Calling Initial Impressions, Literarily Speaking Parts 1&2, 

LITERARILY SPEAKING

1. Guess the names of these well-known writers:

a. “Clubby” American novelist.

b. American diplomat and author of an
autobiography.

c. American essayist best known for children’s books.

d. English journalist and novelist with an
alliterative pen name.

e. Elegiac English poet.

f. American standup comic, one of whose book titles had to be euphemized.

g. Best-selling author of novels with religious themes.

h. English novelist who wrote about a character with the same last name as the author in the previous entry.

What do the surnames of the first seven writers have in common, phonetically, with the surname of the eighth author?

SPOONERIZING PERFORMERS

2. For each entry below, spoonerize the name of a well-known actor to get a two-word phrase with the definition given. (Disclaimer: May contain bad puns):

a. Uninterested baton.

b. Dashes in Morse Code.

c. Crude body part.

d. Make Englander more comfy.

e. Sharpened fruity confection.

f. Wal-Mart employee installs a sidewalk.

g. Untethered cheese.

h. Determine mass of a pet food company.

i. High-ranking female’s DNA component.

INITIAL IMPRESSIONS


3. The initial letters of the words in the title of a 1970s American novel spell the first word in the title. 

The initial letter of that word is also the initial letter of the author’s last name. And the same word is also the last word in a previous novel by the same author, to which the later novel is a sequel. 

What are the novels, and who is the author?

POLITICAL NAME-CALLING

4. Think of a well-known 1970s film. 

The two-word title consists of the first names of two politicians who ran against each other in a memorable election. 

If you say the title out loud, the result sounds like what mourners did after the death of one of the politicians. 

What film is it?

LITERARILY SPEAKING, PART TWO 

5. Think of one of the most widely read American writers of the early 20th century. One of her novels takes its title from a word for a large mythical being. Another of her novels has as its title a two-word phrase that describes such a mythical being. 

The letters in this writer’s first and last names
can be rearranged to spell (1) the last name of another American writer of the 20th century and (2) a two-word phrase describing this second writer’s philosophy as expressed in her novels. Her best-known novel includes in its title the name of another large mythical being.

Who are the two writers, and what are the three novels and the second writer’s philosophy?  

POETRY CORNER, BY ANNA GRAHAM

6. Form four words using the same letters to complete the verse:

The ______ frame this ______ place,

Where ______ young couples fell from grace,

Sought solace from the heated pace,

Of searching ______ making chase.

MENU

Melodramatic Hors d’Oeuvre:

Silver screen, Mandalorian steel

Name a past film actor and who appeared in cinematic crime melodramas. Anagram these letters to spell the workshop used to shape Mandalorian steel. 

Who is this actor. 

What is the workshop?

Hint: The birthplace of this actor is a neighborhood that is an anagram of the combined letters of “etch,” “shell” and “ink.”

Cinematic Slice:

A pair of parts and apparitions

Take the first name of an actress whose first movie part was in a 1940s feature with a title beginning with the plural form of a synonym of “apparition.” 

Also take the first name of an actor who starred in a 1940s movie ending with the singular form of that synonym. 

Together, without a space, they spell a legendary island. 

Who are this actress, actor and island?

Riffing Off Shortz And Krozel Slices:

Palindrome, gland & New England

Will Shortz’s October 6th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Joe Krozel of Creve Coeur, Missouri, reads:

Think of a place in America. Two words, 10 letters altogether. The first five letters read the same forward and backward. The last five letters spell something found in the body. What place is this?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Krozel Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Write down or type, in order:
* a character portrayed by Jack Nicholson;
* a fictional city that shares a nickname in common with Seattle, Sydney and Eugene; and
* a word that precedes “Salvador” and “Paso.” 

The first, second and fourth letters of the result spell the first name of a puzzle-maker. The remaining letters, in order, spell his last name.

What are this character, city, nickname and word? Who is the puzzle-maker?

(Note: Entrees #2 through #7 are the handiwork of our friend Nodd, whose “Nodd ready for prime time” is also featured in this edition of Puzzleria!)

ENTREE #2

Take the name of a midwestern U.S. city. Two words, seven letters altogether. The first five letters read the same forward and backward. 

The last two letters, plus a “G”, spell a part of the body. 

What is the city?

ENTREE #3

Take the name of a city in the eastern U.S. in nine letters. 

The first four letters read the same forward and backward. 

The last four letters, read backward, spell something one might see in a rural part of the state in which the city is located. 

What is the city?

ENTREE #4

Take the name of a city in the western U.S. in ten letters. 

The first three letters read the same forward and backward. 

The first five letters spell a famous place located in an adjoining state. 

What is the city?

ENTREE #5

Take the name of a city in the western U.S. in nine letters. 

The first four letters read the same forward and backward. 

Change the last vowel in the name to a different vowel, and the last four letters will also read the same forward and backward. 

What is the city?

ENTREE #6

Take the name of a city in the western U.S. 

It consists of two words, ten letters in total. 

The The second-through-fourth letters read the same forward and backward.

Remove the last vowel in the name, and rearrange what are now the last six letters to spell a word that describes the U.S. 

What are the city and the word that describes the U.S.?

ENTREE #7

Take the name of a city in the western U.S. Two words, ten letters total. 

Remove the first letter of each of the two
words. 

The name will now read the same forward and backward. 

What is the city?

ENTREE #8

Think of an oxymoronic phrase that consists of a three-letter adjective and a seven-letter plural proper noun. 

The first five letters read the same forward and backward. The last five letters can be rearranged to spell things found on the bodies of many animals... including, occasionally, human animals like Fred Astaire! 

What phrase is this? 

What things can be found on the bodies of many animals and, occasionally, Mr. Astaire?

Hint: Letters number 4, 5 and 6 spell a common Internet acronym.

ENTREE #9

Think of a landlocked nation. One word, 10 letters altogether. 

The first five letters read the same forward and
backward. 

The last five letters can be rearranged to spell either one of two negative contractions.

What is this nation? 

What are the contractions?

ENTREE #10

Think of a place in America. Two words, 13 letters altogether. 

Eight consecutive letters read the same forward and backward. 

The remaining letters can be rearranged to spell things found on the bodies of many animals. 

What place is this?

Hints:

“Life on the Mississippi”

“Abe vs. Steve”

“Just shy of 9 feet”

ENTREE #11

Take a word for a riddle whose answer involves a pun (for example, “Why didn’t the lost hikers starve in the desert? Because of the sand which is there.”)

Remove a palindromic word for a profession from the interior of this word (a palindromic word that rhymes with a word in the first sentence of this puzzle). 
The letters that
remain, without rearrangement, spell an entree you might order at a restaurant and a beverage that may complement it.

What is this word for a riddle?

What is the palindromic word for a profession?

What are the entree and beverage?

ENTREE #12

Think of a place in America founded by an evangelical minister and faith healer. Two words, 12 letters altogether. The first word smacks of Israel. 

Ten consecutive letters in this place read the same forward and backward. The remaining
two letters, if you rotate either one 180-degrees around the y-axis on a graph, will somewhat resemble the other one (like, for example, a lowercase b resembles a lowercase d when so rotated). 

What place is this?

ENTREE #13

Think of a place in America. Two words, 14 letters altogether. 

The first six letters spell a word associated with a “Swamp Fox.” 

Ten consecutive letters in this place read the same forward and backward. The remaining four letters, in order, spell the name of a mythological deity. 

What place is this?

What is the word associated with a “Swamp Fox?”

What is the name of the mythological deity? 

Dessert Menu

“Hydrosomatic” Dessert:

Sweet-but-healthful Heath Bar?

Name a two-word sweet yet healthful food. 

Remove the space and replace a vowel with a
new vowel to name a body of water. 

What are this food and body of water?

Every Thursday 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. 

27 comments:

  1. Note:
    To place a comment under this QUESTIONS? subheading (immediately below), or under any of the three subheadings below it (HINTS! PUZZLE RIFFS! and MY PROGRESS SO FAR...), simply left-click on the orange "Reply" to open a dialogue box where you can make a comment. Thank you.
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Replies
    1. Shouldn't the Slice use the first name of the actor, not the surname?

      Delete
    2. Agreed. I can find no actor with that surname.

      Delete
    3. ViolinTedditor and Noddeditor strike again. My thanks to them both!

      LegoWhoApologigesForHis"TimeWastingForTheSolvers"CarelessMistakesAndShallStriveToMinimizeThem!

      Delete
    4. No apology needed, but you need to acknowledge Tortie for the editing. She pointed it out first.

      Delete
    5. Oops!
      Thanks, Nodd. And my sincere thanks (and apologies) to Tortitide!
      All on this blog have corrected my text at some point or another. So thanks to all. And my apologies to all.

      LegoRealizesHoweverThatSuchSloppinessCanEventuallyReallyBecomeAnnoying!

      Delete
    6. Wow, I got credit for finding a mistake in a puzzle I haven't even LOOKED AT yet? (hee hee....sorry, Tortie)

      Delete
  3. Replies
    1. EARLY SUNDAY HINTS FOR APPETIZERS:
      1. Think of a different horse.
      2. a. Connery, Sean Connery.
      b. Poultry and an apparition.
      c. Lascivious.
      d. Hume, on TV.
      e. Crooning despite precipitation.
      f. Should you decide to accept it.
      g. Norris rival.
      h. Tim O’Hara’s uncle.
      i. May the jester borrow your coat?
      3. Caine think of a hint; sorry.
      4. Nary alone.
      5. Rock Hudson made a movie of the first novel.
      6. First, think of Lebanon.

      Delete
    2. EARLY SUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
      2. G, it ran great.
      3. Contemplate your "navel."
      4. The Duke and Billy Bob rent a car.
      5. Many a year ago, in a kingdom by the Salt Lake.
      6. Site of the famous place in Entree #4.
      7. Ting tang bing bang.

      Delete
    3. OK, so it looks like I have the right answer for E6 after all. However, did the "The first four letters read the same forward and backward." instruction get inadvertedly copied from the previous puzzle? Because the second, third, and fourth (or third, fourth, and fifth) read the same forwards and backwards, but not the first four. Both of the three-letter palindromes are female names.

      TortieWhoWouldAlsoLikeAHintForApp1PartF

      Delete
    4. Yes, Tortie, you are right, as usual. It's letters 2-5 that read the same forward and backward. Thanks!

      App 1, part f hint: The author and a co-author had more than two dozen questions for their poor moms.

      Delete
    5. Thanks, Nodd. I have the right comic now. Still not sure how there is a euphemism in either book title from the writer, though.

      Delete
    6. If you search for the writer's first name and last name and "thriftbooks," it should come up in the search results. At least, it did when I tried it.

      Delete
    7. SUNDAY HINTS:
      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      The four-syllable noun begins with a "d". That should lead you to the first letter of the second word. That should lead you to the common second letter of both words.

      “Nodding Approval” Appetizer:
      See Nodd's hints, above.

      Melodramatic Hors d’Oeuvre:
      The film actor's surname is a watercraft.

      Cinematic Slice:
      The first name of an actress is palindromic.
      The first name of the actor is also the first name of a past world leader whose six-letter full name is a palindrome.

      Riffing Off Shortz And Krozel Slices:
      ENTREE #1
      Write down or type, in order:
      Jack in a Batman flick
      * a character portrayed by Jack Nicholson;
      Seattle is "The Emerald City";
      See Nodd's hints, above, for Entrees #2 through #7.
      ENTREE #8
      The oxymoronic phrase is associated with Vladimir Nabokov ("Yeah, I know, I know.. Not Nabokov again!")
      ENTREE #9
      The landlocked nation is one of the "-stans")
      ENTREE #10
      The place in America is a "suburb" of sorts of St. Louis.
      ENTREE #11
      Chuck!
      ENTREE #12
      The remaining two letters are Z and S
      ENTREE #13
      The first word is city; the second word is a state. The city, spelled backward, consists of a 2-letter refusal, a 1-letter pronoun, and a three-letter horned creature.

      “Hydrosomatic” Dessert:
      If you spell the first word in the two-word food backward and pronounce the result, it sounds somewhat like the surname of a recent president.

      LegObamaRama

      Delete
    8. Lego, do you mean first name of a recent president?
      In any case, I now have the Schpuzzle. I was stuck thinking it was a different pair.

      Nodd, now I see what you mean! Amazon didn't show that title! When I clicked on the title on Thriftbooks, it showed the same name as the Amazon book. I guess it was changed at some point (second edition or whatever).

      Delete
    9. Tortie, that was my surmise too, so based on that assumption, I said it had to be euphemized.

      Delete
    10. Thanks, Tortitude and Nodd. Yes indeed, I meant to say "first name," not "surname."

      LambdaLego?

      Delete
  4. Replies
    1. An ultra-rare event: a Riff from me! This is on Nodd's Appetizers #2:

      Same directions using the phrase "Choose a wooden stick"

      Delete
  5. Replies
    1. I have answers for everything, including VT's riff, except the Schpuzzle (seems impossible without a hint or extreme luck, unless there's a trick to it), App 1. f (found some comics that fit the puzzle theme and that wrote books, but no euphemisms that I can see)., and Entree 6 (my first answer works for everything but the palindromic part).

      OK, so I just saw before posting this that Nodd posted hints. Hopefully they will help with everything but the Schpuzzle.

      Delete
    2. After reading all the hints, I now have more of Nodd's App 2 spoonerisms(but no other Apps, and what's this "Think of a different horse" for all of #1 jazz?!), the Hors d'Oeuvre, the Slice, and Entrees #1, #2, #3, #4, #7, #8, #9, and part of #13(not all).
      pjbAlsoGotThisWeek'sSundayPuzzle(MuchEasierThanLastWeek's,IMHO)

      Delete
    3. I also thought this week's puzzle was a lot easier.

      App 1 is definitely solvable. I'd suggest trying to figure out parts c and d first. What do they have in common? Then the hint will make sense, and many of the answers will fall into place.

      Delete
  6. Happy Friday to everybody on the blog!
    Mom and I are fine. Bryan and Renae took us out to Rock 'n' Roll Sushi earlier this evening, with Mia Kate and Maddy joining us. This is the place where they give you menus made out of actual record albums. The last time I ordered from a copy of the Beatles' Abbey Road. This time they gave me Loose by Crazy Horse(Neil Young's backing band). We also had a greatest hits album by Lynyrd Skynyrd, a record from the Johnny Van Zant band, and one from the country group Alabama. I ordered a chicken "solo", then made it a "duet" with shrimp. I also got some vegetables with fried rice as a side dish, and I had a house salad before, and Coke Zero to drink. Mom and Bryan both had filet mignon and vegetables with fried rice, but I forgot what they both drank. I've also forgotten what Renae had, but I do know both my nieces had sushi(and something to drink). Maddy was quiet mostly, but Mia Kate was more talkative. She was surprised Bryan didn't know who Jeff Buckley was(one of her favorite singers from the 90s). She knows ABBA, Queen, and Fleetwood Mac, and those last two were playing in the restaurant while we were there, as well as two different songs by Three Dog Night. Bryan admitted that, now that Mia Kate is a teenager, he's started to call her Amelia more often than Mia Kate. She also said sometimes there'll be people who wonder where she's originally from(she and Maddy were, of course, both adopted in Beijing, China), and she's said she's from Jasper or Parrish, because Bryan and Renae have raised her in both towns. But some people may even speak Chinese to communicate with her, and they've already heard her speaking plain English with a friend of hers! Some people here in AL, I don't know. Hard to explain it, I guess. BTW Mia Kate's next "Nutcracker" performance will be early in November, and she says practicing the dancing has really hurt her body over time. But Maddy's had some leg/hip surgery and she's had some physical therapy, and she's gotten through it all right so far. We also brought a new walker for Maddy to use, which we gave to Bryan as we were all leaving.
    About the only puzzles I've even attempted so far are some of Nodd's spoonerized actor names in Appetizer #2. Will need hints for everything else, I'm afraid.
    Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and I hope we've all had something good to eat for supper tonight(or dinner, in case that's what you like to call it). Cranberry out!
    pjbAlsoGotDippingSauceForHisMealTonight!

    ReplyDelete