Schpuzzle of the Week:
“The Lunatic in My Head...”
Name an adjective-and-noun description (in six and three letters) of a kindly dude, benevolent beau or compassionate popinjay. Anagram these combined nine letters to spell two words related to a current event. What are these four words and this current event?
Appetizer Menu
A Flavorful Foursome Of Appetizers:
Affixing a prefix, nixing a word!; “Landing in Blanding? Not so outstanding?”; Domestic “pound-paring” vs. “pound-packing”; “Kissin’ in the Kitchen?”
Affixing a prefix, nixing a word!
1. Name a two-word movie franchise.Replace three consecutive interior letters with a 3-letter geometrical prefix.
The result is a one-word movie franchise.
What are these franchises and prefix?
“Landing in Blanding? Not so outstanding?”2. Think of a famous singer – first and last names. Switch the first letters in the names.
Take second and third syllables of this result to, perhaps, describe in two words the town of Blanding in Utah.
Who is this singer?
What is the description?
Domestic “pound-paring” vs. “pound-packing”
3. Take an architectural feature of some houses that, over time, might help you and other residents lose weight.
Move the second letter back eight places earlier in the “circular alphabet stream” (see accompanying graphic).Drop the first and third letters. Mix the result to get something that may add some pounds.
What is this “possibly slimming” architectural feature?
What may “pack-on” a few pounds?
“Kissin’ in the Kitchen?”
4. Name a storage container often found in the kitchen in two words (of two and one syllables). Ignore the second word. Replace first letter of the first word with a copyof its second syllable’s first letter. Place a hyphen between those syllables.
The result is a sometimes-sign of deep emotional bonding.
Hint: Capitalize the first word of the storage container, but don’t “decapitate” it. Instead, do the opposite – “depedicate” it! The result will be a one-letter-shorter brand name of the container.
What are this storage container and sign of deep emotional bonding?
Extra Credit: Fill in the six missing letters in the Saturday Evening Post magazine cover caption, and explain its significance.
MENU
Do-Re-Mi Hors d’Oeuvre:
Weighing-in on the musical scale
Imagine an infinite stream of notes on the musical scale:
DO RE MI FA SOL LA TI DO RE MI FA SOL LA TI DO RE etc. ...
Choose a connected trio (which will contain either six or seven letters).
Transpose the first two letters.
The last three letters of the result spell something you might hear spoken in a church.
Identify two adjacent letters. If you would delete them the result would be a singing voice or family of musical instruments with a particular pitch you might hear at a church service.
But do not delete them. Instead, transpose two adjacent interior letters, then delete the letter that follows them. The result is the surname of a well-known judge who might be present (and perhaps even officiating) when the “something you might hear spoken in a church” is spoken. The last three letters of that surname spell the surname of a second well-known judge who may be present and perhaps officiating.
What three consecutive notes on the scale did you choose?
What is the singing voice or family of musical instruments?
Who are the well-known judges?
“Bored? Games!” Slice:
“Intersectimbibility” of Board Games and Booze!
Name a relatively modern board game adapted from a similar-sounding but two-letter-shorter ancient board game.
Six consecutive letters in the name are an
anagram of a word sometimes heard during drinking.
The remaining letters are an anagram of a “hoppy uppercase adult beverage.”
The first and final two letters of the game are an anagram of an antonym of “guzzle” that drinkers of that beverage would likely not employ.
Six other consecutive letters in the name of the game spell what sounds like an adjective describing some snacks that might complement this adult beverage.
Seven consecutive letters in the board game word, if you replace the last one with the letter preceding it in the alphabet, spell a synonym of “thirsty.”
What are this board game, three anagrams, adjective and “thirsty” synonym?
Riffing Off Shortz And Gordon Slices:
Heavenly Puzzley Delights Above... Worldly Delights Below
Will Shortz’s March 29th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday Challenge puzzle, created by Peter Gordon of Great Neck, New York, reads:
Name some tools used by shoemakers. After this word place part of a shoe. The result will be the subject of a famous painting. What is it?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Gordon Slices read:
ENTREE #1Name a place that is the first noun in the name of a 5-word famous painting – a noun for place associated with a contrarian lass named Mary.
If you replace the “a” in “Mary” with an “o” the result is “Mory.”
To this place do the same: replace the “a” with an “o”... but also the replace the “a” with an “o”! The result is a name (2-syllables, 6 letters).
Now name a type of moss used in this place to increase moisture retention and promotes healthy root growth. This result sounds like a 1-syllable alternative (4 letters) to a 2-syllable name (5 letters).
This 2-syllable-5-letter name and 2-syllable-6-letter name form the full name of a puzzle-maker.Who is it?...
But wait! You may not yet have sussed out the name of the painting! That’s also part of the answer!
The fourth word begins with a three-letter crop that is a “hominiphone” of a military officer. This fourth word also begins with where this crop is rooted, in five letters.
The fifth word begins with a four-letter store that may often offer a selection of local and seasonal farm produce, such as the three-letter crop.
So...
Who is this puzzle-maker? What is the type of moss?
What is the name of the painting?
What are the crop and where it is rooted?
What is the store?
Note: Entrees #2 through #7 are creations by Nodd, author of “Nodd ready for prime time” on Puzzleria!
ENTREE #2Name a material used to make footwear, in two words.
Rearrange the first word to name a place depicted in a famous painting of the Spanish Renaissance.
What are the material and the painting?
ENTREE #3
Name a famous American painter, first and last names.Move the last letter of the last name four
places later in the alphabet.
Rearrange to spell two shoe parts and a word that rhymes with “shoe.”
Who is the painter and what are the shoe parts and rhyming word?
ENTREE #4
The second half of a compound word for something used with footwear is a word for something of which there are two in a famous Picasso painting.
What is used with footwear, what is depicted in the painting, and what painting is it?
ENTREE #5
Take the second word in the title of a famous Expressionist painting and change the last letter to an E.Rearrange to get a word for something undesirable that shoes do.
What is the painting, and what do shoes do?
ENTREE #6
Insert a space in the last name of a famous American painter to get a phrase for what a certain type of shoe is designed to do.
Who is the painter and what is the phrase?
ENTREE #7
A famous Renaissance painter’s last name is also the name of a high-end shoe brand.
The title of one of his most famous paintings can be arranged to spell a shoe part, a proprietary shoe technology, and a word that
typically appears in business memoranda.
His first name, with the last two letters changed to a U.S. state postal abbreviation, is a kind of shoe.
Who is the painter, and what are the painting, shoe part, shoe technology, memorandum word, and kind of shoe?
ENTREE #8
Your mission is to name each title in the octet of visual artistry described below:
A. Name a painting with a title that contains two desirable playing cards – in games like poker, canasta, bridge and gin rummy, for example.B. Name a painting with a title that contains
two body parts which might be adorned by pricey “apparel” (in the broad sense of the word), but contain only the singular form of that apparel.
C. Take the last 8 letters of the title of a painting. If you delete the 4th and 6th letters, then transpose the 5th and 7th letters, the result spells the name of a river which is the color of the final word in the painting’s title, according to the title of a waltz composed in the 19th Century.
D. The first 5 letters in the title of a painting spell the name of a trick-taking card game.
The last 7 letters in the title spell a type of endplay strategy – employed in contract bridge, for example – in which an opponent’s apparent trump trick goes away... (well, we can pray, anyway)
E. Replace the first word in the 2-word title of a painting from an article to a pronoun.
The result sounds like a dessert.
F. The title of a painting contains the name of a planet and a word that rhymes with one of its “neighboring planets.”
G. The final three letters of a painting sound like a one-letter-longer pejorative noun that some insensitive viewers of the painting might use to describe any of the people who appearin the painting.
H. The title of a painting begins with a palindrome and ends with a palindrome. Neither palindrome is an English word.
But the first palindrome is a word a Japanese and Hausa language word, and the second palindrome is a word in French, Latin and Turkish language word.
Dessert Menu
Blood-Pump(k)in’ Dessert:
Halloween Treaters invite Vampires that bite!
Take a word associated with blood.A pair of interior adjacent letters in the word spell a spelled-out letter (like “ef” or “ex,” for example).
Replace this pair with a letter that is NOT spelled-out (like “g” or “y,” for example). Then transpose this new letter with the letter to the right of it.
Move another interior letter two places later in
the word.
The result is a word associated with Halloween.
What are these two words?
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 Thursday.
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.
Note:
ReplyDeleteTo 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...
QUESTIONS?
ReplyDeleteTime to get these comments going! Having had NO success with the Schpuzzle (despite it seeming OBVIOUS what the event in the news must be) and having tried NUMEROUS combinations with 9 letters, but not coming up with anything, and then getting nowhere with the Appetizers either(that was last night), at least I managed to solve the Hors D'O and Slice.
DeleteBUT A QUESTION re the Slice: there seems to be a little problem with the wording about how "those same remaining letters spell an antonym of 'guzzle": No, they do not. One of the three letters is DIFFERENT.....has to be to get the antonym. I'm not quite sure, then, how you re-state the paragraph about "those same remaining letters are also an anagram of an antonym...blah blah blah...."
Thank you, ViolinTeddy. You are right about my wrong slice! You have always been an excellent "ViolinTeditor!"
DeleteI believe I have fixed it.
LegoAppreciatingThe"GentleCorrection"
Okay, as confused as I am over ALL the Appetizers, for #3, I think I found an error in the directions...unless I am completely batty!
DeleteIt says to move the second letter of the architectural thing BACK, ie, 8 places EARLIER In the alphabet...but that results in nothing that works! When I sent that later 8 places LATER in the alphabet instead, , then I finally obtained a word that I could anagram and end up with a potential pound-packer.
The Tao says:" there are many paths to the same Golden final destination."
DeletePerhaps so, PLantie, but I utterly fail to see how going backwards in the alphabet for App 3 works.
DeleteHINTS!
ReplyDeleteSUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
Delete2. There’s a place in Ohio with the same name, pronounced differently.
3. The artist was American. His most famous painting is suggested by the first line of the first song on the “Who’s Next” album.
4. The compound word is a noun but can also be a verb meaning to force something to go where it doesn’t fit.
5. What you do with a snack.
6. Yesterday’s end-of-day mail delivery?
7. A deity on an oil-company logo.
E2.It's Greek to me.
DeleteA1- First word of the first movie title is also in the title of a popular 63" film.
DeleteA3. In the title of a 67" film.
I haven't even had a chance to READ the entrees OR any hints yet (and may well not be able to before Wed's deadline), but I DID want to see what the Schpuzzle hint was....so was surprised to see that there isn't one....did it somehow get wiped out amidst the computer problems this last week? (I assume you KEEP answers written down, as you compose these puzzles, right?)
DeleteI could be wrong, but I THOUGHT that Tortie said somewhere that she had solved it....if so, we will await HER hint.
Oops, my error...Tortie said she had NOT solved it.
DeleteVT, you are right; I haven't solved the Schpuzzle. I even tried to figure out other things in the news, but no luck there. Maybe another solver (Nodd?) has figured it out?
DeleteOther updates: I think I finally have all of PS's riffs, thanks to the hints. Missing two parts of Entree #8: A (can't get anywhere with this) and C (have the right river, can't quite find a famous painting that ends with the right eight letters).
SUNDAY/MONDAY HINTS:
DeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
“The Lunatic in My Head...”
No hint! Know why? (and this may give frustrated solved some measure of pleasure...
I don't know the answer! I cannot solve my own schpuzzle! I just spent an hour trying to do so.
If someone has solved it, kindly provide a hint please!
A Flowerful Foursome Of Plantsmithian Appetizers
Note: See Plantsmith's hints for his first three "Puzzley Delights" in his April 5 at 5:18PM and April 5 at 7:05PM Posts, (SEE ABOVE A BIT). I have added my own hints BELOW.
Affixing a prefix, nixing a word!; “Landing in Blanding? Not so outstanding?”; Domestic “pound-paring” vs. “pound-packing”; “Kissin’ in the Kitchen?”
1.
Affixing a prefix, nixing a word!
Hint #1: The three consecutive interior letters you replace can be rearranged to spell a beaver-built barrier.
Hint #2: The one-word movie franchise ends with something “for kids.”
2.
“Landing in Blanding? Not so outstanding?”
the surname of the singer followed by the 2nd word in the description form confections consisting of caramel and nougat coated with milk chocolate... yum!
3.
Domestic “pound-paring” vs. “pound-packing”
The “possibly slimming” architectural feature might be "spirally."
The answer to "What may “pack-on” a few pounds?" reminds me of a Badger State with a French name of something one might drink to "wash down" this pound-packer.
4.
“Kissin’ in the Kitchen?”
The "sign of deep emotional bonding," if you replace its initial letter with an H, remains a “sign of deep emotional bonding.”
Do-Re-Mi Hors d’Oeuvre
Weighing-in on the musical scale
If you replace the 3rd note in your stream with the letter N, the result is a language.
“Bored? Games!” Slice:
“Intersectimbibility” of Board Games and Booze!
The middle syllable in the relatively modern board game sounds like edam or gouda.
Riffing Off Shortz And Gordon Slices:
Heavenly Puzzley Delights Above... Worldly Delights Below
ENTREE #1
The crop is rooted (or should we say "planted?") in a "planet."
The store is an anagram of a synonym of "prevaricated."
(Note:See Nodd's excellent hints to his answers to his excellent Entrees #2 through #7 in his April 5, 2026 at 11:27 AM post.
ENTREE #8
Your mission is to <use my hints to help you name each title in the octet of visual artistry described below:
A. cards equaling 11 or 21
B. If you remove an 'a" from the apparel you'll be "making a mistake."
C. It's "only the second-longest river in Europe!"
D. An alternative title of the painting includes the word "Gray."
E. A much parodied work of art... the artist's surnames suggests that he likes snacks.
F. The artist's first name is an 6-letter anagram of 3-letter synonyms of "earth" and of "sprinted."
G. The name of the artist? Cary + Natalie!
H. The first 4 letters of the title, in reverse, spell Alexa's rival.
Blood-Pump(k)in’ Dessert:
Halloweeners invite Vampires who bite!
The first two syllables of the word associated with Halloween rhyme. The third syllable has got "nothing" when it comes to rhyming with its predecessors.... but, spelled in reverse, it has really got nothing!
LegoWhoCannotSolveHisOwnPuzzles!Help!!
Hallelujah! After much effort I have finally solved my Schpuzzle! (I even found a possible alternative answer that one or two of you brilliant solvers may submit.)
DeleteAnd so, now I am able to provide a hint:
~ The first word in the Schpuzzle answer is the first syllable in a digit;
~ A hint to the second word: “Even though the land is soaked, we heard little regarding how the continued rainy May weather may affect the competition.”
LegoIsConfidentThatIfICanSolveItIKnowYouCanSolveIt!
I promise to provide a second Schpuzzle hint (that amplifies the one above) a bit later today (Tuesday).
DeleteLegoLoony
Lego, thanks for the hint. Got the Schpuzzle now.
DeleteTortieWhoMightAskWhichOneIsAleciaMooreAndTheLateUncleFromNewJerseyTV?
My brain refuses to function. I look at that hint for the Schpuzzle, and can only think that you must have meant "the first SYLLABLE (since it's a six-letter word) of the Schpuzzle answer's first word IS a DIGIT"....but since Tortie solved it from the hint, I can't be correct. But I can come up with NOTHING that works, never mind the complete inability to get a three-letter word out of the "land/heard little/May weather" portion of the hint. Quadruple sigh....
DeleteI know I promised a Tuesday Schpuzzle hint. Too late for that. My apologies. But here is an early Wednesday hint:
DeleteThe hint I gave was:
~ The first word in the Schpuzzle answer is the first syllable in a digit;
That digit is an appendage.
~ A hint to the second word was:
“Even though the land is soaked, we heard little regarding how the continued rainy May weather may affect the competition.”
land is,
heard,
little, and
May weather...
are all surnames.
LegoNowGoingToSleep
Thanks, Lego. If my answer's correct, one of the answer words is supplied in the puzzle itself, which initially led me to think that word could not be part of the answer.
DeletePUZZLE RIFFS!
ReplyDeleteChoose a connected quartet from the infinite stream of notes and rearrange to get a name for someone who, arguably, sets their sights too low.
DeleteVery nice, Paul. And, if I actually have figured out your intended answer, I believe you have coined a new word!
DeleteLegoNotesThatTheOddLettersOfTheWordHeSuspectsPaulDiscoveredAreAnAnagramOfACommunicationToolThatManyOfUsUseOften
My word's odd letters are all vowels and I don't believe I coined it, but I'm glad you found enjoyment in the challenge and I'm looking forward to the new word you came up with. Admittedly, "setting one's sights too low" is a pretty vague description of the practices of someone deserving of the label, but I didn't want to give too much away.
DeleteThere's another word, unrelated, that can be "made-to-order" from the same quartet of notes (8 letters).
I used LA-TI-RE-DO to make IDOLATER. It is not easy to say what an idolater is without using the word IDOL, but I contend that anyone worshipping that which is not God is setting their sights too low. Turns out those letters can also be arranged to spell TAILORED. Made-to-order.
DeleteMY PROGRESS SO FAR...
ReplyDeleteI'm currently missing the Schpuzzle, and Apps #2 & 4. I may or may not have App #1, as my answer is technically the second word in a two-word film franchise. (The first word is an article.) I'm unsure of the riff, as my word doesn't match Lego's hint.
DeleteI think you have it as second movie title - is two words-first one an article.
DeletePuzzleria 4-8-26”- 63 degrees today
DeleteSchpuzzle: App:
1. Mad Max, dma- to tri =The Matrix,
2. Bruno Mars, No bars.- Blanding Utah is a dry city.
3. Staircase, Eclairs
4. Zip Lock bag, Lip loc- lip lock.
Entrees:
1. Peter Gordon, peat, the garden of earthly delights, earth, deli
2. Tooled leather, “view of Toledo” by El Greco.
3. Andrew Wyeth, Wyeth, Rand, w, Yelt, yew
4.
6. Norman Rockwell, rock well
IF YOU HAVE COMMENTS THAT DO NOT PERTAIN TO ANY OF THE FOUR CATEGORIES ABOVE, YOU MAY WRITE THEM BELOW THIS POST. THANK YOU.
ReplyDeleteHappy Saturday Night to all upon this lively blog!
ReplyDeleteSorry if I forgot to post a comment last night. I just went on to my usual cryptic crosswords, not thinking another thought about it. Mom and I had Subway for supper last night. Today we went grocery shopping, primarily for tomorrow's Easter get-together at Bryan and Renae's house. Haven't really had time to work on this week's puzzles just yet, but now that I've seen the finished product, I've at least figured out the puzzlemaker's name in Entree #1. But shouldn't both vowels in the place be replaced with an O? You've only said to replace the A, nothing more. If I have time later tonight I may work on the rest, but it's more than likely I'll work on it after we've come back home sometime tomorrow night.
BTW Good luck to Lego as he tries to get his computer fixed!
And as always, good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and of course, Happy Easter to all tomorrow! Cranberry out!
pjbKnowsTonight[SNL]HasJackBlackAsHostWithJackWhiteAsMusicalGuest(WonderIfTheyMeantToDoThat?)
cranberry (aka Patrick J. Berry, Cryptic Crossword Constructor Extraordinaire!) is absolutely correct about my faulty vowel replacement instructions. I believe I have now fixed it.
DeleteLegoWithAnAttitudeOfGratitudeForAllThe"Editude!"
Schpuzzle: (Post hint: ) KINDLY FOP, PINK FLOYD
ReplyDeleteApp:
1. MAD MAX, (THE) MATRIX, TRI
2. (Post hint: ) BRUNO MARS; NO BARS
3. STAIRCASE; ECLAIRS
4. (Post hint: ) ZIPLOCK BAG, LIP-LOCK (EC: ???)
Hors d’Oeuvre: LA TI DO; ALTO; ALITO, ITO
Slice: PARCHEESI, CHEERS, IPA, SIP, CHEESY, PARCHED
Entrees:
1. PETER GORDON; PEAT; THE GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS; EAR, EARTH; DELI
2. TOOLED LEATHER, VIEW OF TOLEDO
3. ANDREW WYETH, RAND, WELT, YEW
4. SHOEHORN, HORN, GUERNICA
5. THE SCREAM, CREASE
6. NORMAN ROCKWELL, ROCK WELL
7. SANDRO BOTTICELLI, PRIMAVERA, AIR, RE, SANDAL
8. (Post hint, because I wasn’t in any shape to solve earlier:) A. ??? (ace + ten/jack/queen/king); B. GIRL WITH A PEARL EARRING; C. THE DANCE BLUE ??? (DANUBE); D. WHISTLER’S MOTHER; E. THE SCREAM, ICE CREAM; F. THE BIRTH OF VENUS; G. AMERICAN GOTHIC; H. IRISES
Dessert: HEMOGLOBIN, HOBGOBLIN
Riff: LA TI DO RE, IDOLATER (TAILORED)
SCHPUZZLE – KINDLY FOP; PINK FLOYD; ARTEMIS MISSION TO THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZERS
1. MAD MAX, TRI-, MATRIX
2. BRUNO MARS; NO BARS
3. STAIRCASE, ECLAIRS
4. ZIPLOCK BAG, LIP-LOCK
HORS D’OEUVRE – LA, TI, DO; ALTO; ALITO, ITO
SLICE – PARCHEESI; CHEERS, IPA, SIP; CHEESY; PARCHED
ENTREES
1. PETER GORDON, PEAT; “THE GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS”; EAR, EARTH, DELI
2. TOOLED LEATHER, “VIEW OF TOLEDO”
3. ANDREW WYETH; WELT, RAND, YEW
4. SHOEHORN, HORN, “GUERNICA”
5. “THE SCREAM”; CREASE
6. NORMAN ROCKWELL; ROCK WELL
7. SANDRO BOTTICELLI; “PRIMAVERA”; VAMP, AIR, RE, SANDAL
8. A. “QUEEN AND ACE” by Serhiy Reznichenko
B. “GIRL WITH A PEARL EARRING” by Johannes Vermeer
C. “ROYAL RED AND BLUE” by Mark Rothko or “COMPOSITION NO. II WITH RED AND BLUE” by Piet Mondrian
D. “WHISTLER’S MOTHER” by James Whistler
E. “THE SCREAM” by Edvard Munch
F. “THE BIRTH OF VENUS” by Sandro Botticelli
G. “AMERICAN GOTHIC” by Grant Wood
H. “IRISES” by Vincent Van Gogh
DESSERT – HEMOGLOBIN, HOBGOBLIN
PAUL’S RIFF – LA, TI, DO, RE => IDOLATER
SCHPUZZLE: FLOYDS? BOY? => This makes absolutely NO SENSE to me….because the second word is supposed to have THREE LETTERS, while the first word is supposed to have SIX letters => ?????? MOON FLYBY??????? <-At least, that is nine letters
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZERS:
1. DAM?
2. MILKY WAYS?
3. STAIRS => T becomes B => SBAIRS, remove S & A => BIRS => RIBS [The directions say to move the second letter EARLIER in the alphabet, but I had to move it eight places LATER to get BIRS, which at least is close to BIERE, and results in RIBS.]
HORS D’O: LA TI DO => ALTIDO => "I DO”; ALTO; ALITO; ITO
SLICE: PACHISI => PARCHEESI => CHEERS & IPA [which I STILL do not know what that is]; SIP; CHEESY; PARCHED
ENTREES:
1. GARDEN => GORDON; PEAT => PETE; PETER GORDON; EARTH; DELI => THE GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS
2. TOOLED LEATHER => TOLEDO => VIEW OF TOLEDO
3. ANDREW WYETH => WYETL => RAND, WELT, YEW. [Never heard of the word RAND before]
4. SHOEHORN; BULL in painting HAS TWO HORNS; GUERNICA
5. THE SCREAM => CREASE [This may be wrong, as it doesn’t seem to fit with the hint about a snack]
6 NORMAN ROCKWELL => ROCK WELL [I do NOT understand the hint at all]
7. BOTTICELLI => PRIMAVERA => VAMP, AIR, RE [Once again, I fail to see how the hint was relevant]
SANDRO => SANDAL
8. (A). 10 and ACE; (C) DAN?BLUE => DANUBE: (D) WHISTLER'S MOTHER; (H) IRISES by Van Gogh
DESSERT: HEMOGLOBIN => HBOGLOBIN => HOBGLOBIN => HOBGOBLIN
The current event is PINK FLOYD? Huh? Not in a million years would I have ever known or been able to come up with that.
DeleteFurthermore, "KINDLY" was IN the text of the puzzle. Why would I (or anyone) think it WAS the actual first word answer????
DeleteRibs is a great alt for three. I was also mowed under by the Schpuzzle -probably not.
DeleteVT, here are the explanations for the hints you wondered about:
DeleteEntree 5 -- you "munch" a snack; Edvard Munch painted The Scream.
Entree 6 -- the hint was posted on Sunday, so "yesterday’s end-of-day mail delivery" would be the Saturday Evening Post, for which Norman Rockwell did a lot of illustrations.
Entree 7 -- "A deity on an oil-company logo" referred to Venus on a shell (the Shell Oil logo) which describes Botticelli's most famous painting, The Birth of Venus.
Plantie, I had originally HAD 'staircase", but could never make the directions work even then...I have no idea now WHY.....so sorry about that.
DeleteThanks for those explanations, Nodd. I am extremely tired right now, and can't even make sense of the words, but will come back to compare them to the Entrees and any attempts I had made at them...later, when I'm not drooping!
DeleteSchpuzzle
ReplyDeleteKINDLY FOP=PINK FLOYD, who recorded "DARK SIDE OF THE MOON", which is where the ARTEMIS MISSION is going right now.
Appetizer Menu
1. "MAD MAX", "(The)MATRIX" with TRI replacing D, M, and A
2. BRUNO MARS, NO BARS
3. STAIRCASE, ECLAIRS
4. ZIPLOC(bags), LIP-LOCK
Menu
Do-Re-Mi Hors d'Oeuvre
LA TI DO, ALTO, (Samuel)ALITO, (Lance)ITO
"Bored? Games!" Slice
PARCHEESI, CHEERS, IPA(Indian Pale Ale), SIP, CHEESY, PARCHED
Entrees
1. GARDEN, PEAT, PETER GORDON, EAR, EARTH, DELI, "THE GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS"
2. TOOLED LEATHER, "VIEW OF TOLEDO"
3. ANDREW WYETH, WELT, RAND, YEW
4. SHOEHORN, HORN, "GUERNICA"
5. "THE SCREAM", CREASE
6. NORMAN ROCKWELL, ROCK WELL
7. SANDRO BOTTICELLI, "PRIMAVERA", VAMP, AIR, RE, SANDAL
8.
A. "QUEEN AND ACE", by Sergey Reznichenko
B. "GIRL WITH A PEARL EARRING", by Johannes Vermeer
C. "ROYAL RED AND BLUE", by Mark Rothko, "THE BLUE DANUBE", by Johann Strauss II
D. "WHISTLER'S MOTHER", by James McNeill Whistler, WHIST, SMOTHER
E. "THE SCREAM"(again), by Edvard Munch, I SCREAM(ice cream)
F. "THE BIRTH OF VENUS", by Sandro Botticelli(again),VENUS, EARTH
G. "AMERICAN GOTHIC", by Grant Wood, HICK
H. "IRISES", by Vincent Van Gogh
Blood-Pump(k)in' Dessert
HEMOGLOBIN, HOBGOBLIN
BTW, Mom had Bryan and Renae take her to the UAB hospital in Birmingham this evening to see about the strange knot she has on her head. We don't know if it's another brain tumor. All we know is Mom has been a lot more talkative lately, and she may need to have it examined. She may not even come back home tonight. I hope it turns out to be nothing serious, but just the same, I would like you all to pray for us at this time. Please do so. Thanks.-pjb
So sorry, Cranberry. I wish the best for Mom and your family.
DeletePrayers for your wonderful mother, Patrick!
DeleteLegoPrayingHard
Plantsmith piggybacking on prayers and thoughts for Patrick's mom.
DeleteBest wishes for your mom, pjb.
DeleteThis Week's Official Answers for the record, Part 1:
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
“The Lunatic in My Head...”
Name an adjective-and-noun description (in six and three letters) of a kindly dude, benevolent beau or compassionate popinjay.
Anagram these combined nine letters to spell two words related to a current event.
What are these four words and the current event?
Answer:
KINDLY FOP; PINK FLOYD; the U.S. launch of a rocket to circle the moon;
It's the April 1st launch of a rocket piloted by three men and a woman who will circle the moon, thereby getting a four-hour "gander" of its "far side," or "dark side." (All we get to see on Earth is the "man in the Moon" who smiles down on us!)
Explanation: Pink Floyd's 1973 "Dark Side of the Moon" album, the "fourth-best-selling album in history," according to the album's Wikipedia page.
Lego...
This Week's Official Answers for the record, Part 2:
ReplyDeleteA Flowerful Foursome Of Plantsmithian Appetizers
Affixing a prefix, nixing a word!; “Landing in Blanding? Not so outstanding?”; Domestic “pound-paring” vs. “pound-packing”; “Kissin’ in the Kitchen?”
Affixing a prefix, nixing a word!
1. Name a two-word movie franchise.
Replace three consecutive interior letters with a 3letter geometrical prefix.
The result is a one-word movie franchise. What are these franchises and prefix?
Optional Hint #1: The three consecutive interior letters you replace can be rearranged to spell a beaver-built barrier.
Optional Hint #2: The one-word movie franchise ends with something “for kids.”
Answer:
"Mad Max"; "Matrix"; "tri- ("triangle," "trigonometry," "trilateral," "trisector"
Mad Max => Ma+tri+x
“Landing in Blanding? Not so outstanding?”
2. Think of a famous singer – first and last names. Switch the first letters in the names.
Take second and third syllables of this result to, perhaps, describe in two words the town of Blanding in Utah.
Who is this singer?
What is the description?
Answer:
Bruno Mars => Mruno Bars => No Bars!
(Blanding is a "bar-less dry town..." and, according to some reports, also very bland!)
Domestic “pound-paring” vs. “pound-packing”
3. Take an architectural feature of some houses that, over time, might help you and other residents LOSE weight.
Move the second letter back eight places earlier in the “alphabet stream” (see diagram).
Drop the first and third letters. Mix the result to get something that may ADD some pounds.
What is this “possibly slimming” architectural feature?
What may “pack-on” a few pounds?
Answer:
Staircase; Eclairs
staircase => slaircase => l+ircase => eclairs
“Kissin’ in the Kitchen?”
4. Name a storage container often found in the kitchen in two words (of two and one syllables).
Ignore the second word.
Replace first letter of the first word with a copy of its second syllable’s first letter. Place a hyphen between those syllables.
The result is a sometimes-sign of deep emotional bonding.
Hint: Capitalize the first word of the storage container, but don’t “decapitate” it. Instead, do the opposite – “depedicate” it! The result will be a one-letter-shorter brand name of the container.
What are this storage container and sign of deep emotional bonding?
Extra Credit: Fill in the six missing letters in the Post magazine cover.
Answer:
ziplock (bag); lip-lock
Hint: ziplock => Ziploc
(Photo caption: "Snip Oz!" is an anagram of the brand name "Ziploc")
Note #1: According to Merriam-Webster, a "ziplock" bag is a usually plastic container (bag) having an interlocking groove and ridge that form a tight seal when pressed together
Note #2: "Ziploc," however, is an American brand of reusable, resealable sliding-(tongue-in-groove)-channel storage bags and containers originally developed and test marketed by Dow Chemical Company in 1968.
Lego...
This Week's Official Answers for the record, Part 3:
ReplyDeleteMENU
Do-Re-Mi Hors d’Oeuvre
Weighing-in on the musical scale
Imagine an infinite stream of notes on the musical scale:
DO RE MI FA SOL LA TI DO RE MI FA SOL LA TI DO RE etc. ...
Choose a connected trio (which will contain either six or seven letters).
Transpose the first two letters.
The last three letters of the result spell something you might hear spoken in a church.
Identify two adjacent letters. If you would delete them the result would be a singing voice or family of musical instruments with a particular pitch you might hear at a church service.
But do not delete them. Instead, transpose two adjacent interior letters, then delete the letter that follows them. The result is the surname of a well-known judge who might be present (and perhaps even officiating) when the “something you might hear spoken in a church” is spoken. The last three letters of that surname spell the surname of a second well-known judge who may be present and perhaps officiating.
What three consecutive notes on the scale did you choose?
What is the singing voice or family of musical instruments?
Who are the well-known judges?
Answer:
LA TI DO;
ALITO;
(Samual Alito; Lance Ito)
“Bored? Games!” Slice:
“Intersectimbibility” of Board Games and Booze!
Name a relatively modern board game adapted from a similar-sounding but two-letter-shorter ancient board game.
Six consecutive letters in the name are an anagram of a word sometimes heard during drinking. CHEERS
The remaining letters are an anagram of a “hoppy uppercase adult beverage.” (IPA)
The first and final two letters are an anagram of an antonym of “guzzle” that drinkers of that beverage would likely not employ. (SIP)
Six other consecutive letters in the name of the game spell what sounds like an adjective describing some snacks that might complement this beverage. CHEESI
Seven consecutive letters in the word, if your replace the last one with the letter preceding it in the alphabet, spell a synonym of “thirsty.” PARCHED
What are this board game, three anagrams, adjective and “thirsty” synonym?
Answer:
Parcheesi (Introduced in the 19th and 20th Centuries, adapted from Pachisi);
CHEERS! ( an anagram of (pa)RCHEES(i)
IPA (India Pale Ale, an anagram of PAcheesI)
SIP (an anagram of PAcheesI)
CHEESI (which sounds like CHEESY)
PARCHED (Parchee... => Parched
Lego...
This Week's Official Answers for the record, Part 4:
ReplyDeleteRiffing Off Shortz And Gordon Slices:
Heavenly Puzzley Delights Above... Worldly Delights Below
Will Shortz’s March 29th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday Challenge puzzle, created by Peter Gordon of Great Neck, New York, reads:
Name some tools used by shoemakers. After this word place part of a shoe. The result will be the subject of a famous painting. What is it?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Gordon Slices read:
ENTREE #1
Name a place that is the first noun in the name of a 5-word famous painting – a noun for place associated with a contrarian lass named Mary. If you replace the “a” in “Mary” with an “o” the result is “Mory.”
To this place do the same... replace the “a” with an “o”... but also the replace the “a” with an “o”! The result is a name (2-syllables, 6 letters).
Now name a type of moss used in this place to increase moisture retention and promotes healthy root growth. This result sounds like a 1-syllable alternative (4 letters) to a 2-syllable name (5 letters).
This 2-syllable-5-letter name and 2-syllable-6-letter name form the full name of a puzzle-maker.
Who is it?...
But wait! You may not yet have sussed out the name of the painting! That’s also part of the answer!
The fourth word begins with a three-letter crop that is a “hominiphone” of a military officer. This fourth word also begins with where this crop is rooted, in five letters.
The fifth word begins with a four-letter store that may often offer a selection of local and seasonal farm produce, such as the three-letter crop.
So...
Who is this puzzle-maker? What is the type of moss?
What is the name of the painting?
What are the crop and where it is rooted?
What is the store?
Answer:
Peter Gordon; peat (moss); garden;
"The Garden of Earthly Delights"
Ear (of corn), Earth;
Deli(catessen)
Lego...
This Week's Official Answers for the record, Part 5:
ReplyDelete(Note:Entrees #2 through #7 are creations by Nodd, author of “Nodd ready for prime time” on Puzzleria!
ENTREE #2
Name a material used to make footwear, in two words. Rearrange the first word to name a place depicted in a famous painting of the Spanish Renaissance. What are the material and the painting?
Answer:
TOOLED LEATHER; VIEW OF TOLEDO
ENTREE #3
Name a famous American painter, first and last names. Move the last letter of the last name four places later in the alphabet. Rearrange to spell two shoe parts and a word that rhymes with “shoe.” Who is the painter and what are the shoe parts and rhyming word?
Answer:
ANDREW WYETH; RAND, WELT; YEW
ENTREE #4
The second half of a compound word for something used with footwear is a word for something of which there are two in a famous Picasso painting. What is used with footwear, what is depicted in the painting, and what painting is it?
Answer:
SHOEHORN, HORN, GUERNICA
ENTREE #5
Take the second word in the title of a famous Expressionist painting and change the last letter to an E. Rearrange to get a word for something undesirable that shoes do. What is the painting, and what do shoes do?
Answer:
THE SCREAM; CREASE
ENTREE #6
Insert a space in the last name of a famous American painter to get a phrase for what a certain type of shoe is designed to do. Who is the painter and what is the phrase?
Answer:
NORMAN ROCKWELL; ROCK WELL
ENTREE #7
A famous Renaissance painter’s last name is also the name of a high-end shoe brand. The title of one of his most famous paintings can be arranged to spell a shoe part, a proprietary shoe technology, and a word that typically appears in business memoranda. His first name, with the last two letters changed to a U.S. state postal abbreviation, is a kind of shoe. Who is the painter, and what are the painting, shoe part, shoe technology, memorandum word, and kind of shoe?
Answer:
SANDRO BOTTICELLI; PRIMAVERA; VAMP, AIR, RE, SANDAL
Lego...
This Week's Official Answers for the record, Part 6:
ReplyDeleteENTREE #8
Your mission is to name each title in the octet of visual artistry described below:
A. Name a painting with a title that contains two desirable playing cards – in games like poker, canasta, bridge and gin rummy, for example.
B. Name a painting with a title that contains two body parts which might be adorned by pricey “apparel” (in the broad sense of the word), but contain only the singular form of that apparel.
C. Take the last 8 letters in the title of a painting. If you delete the 4th and 6th letters, then transpose the 5th and 7th letters, the result spells the name of a river which is the color of the final word in the painting’s title, according to the title of a waltz composed in the 19th Century.
D. The first 5 letters in the title of a painting spell the name of a trick-taking card game. The last 7 letters in the title spell a type of endplay strategy – employed in contract bridge, for example – in which an opponent’s apparent trump trick goes away (oh how we wish).
E. Replace the first word in the 2-word title of a painting from an article to a pronoun. The result sounds like a dessert.
F. The title of a painting contains the name of a planet and a word that rhymes with one of its “neighboring planets.”
G. The final three letters of a painting sound like a one-letter-longer pejorative noun that some insensitive viewers of the painting might use to describe any of the people who appear in the painting.
H. The title of a painting begins with a palindrome and ends with a palindrome. Neither palindrome is an English word. But the first palindrome is a word a Japanese and Hausa language word, and the second palindrome is a word in French, Latin and Turkish language word.
A. ACE, KING; ("the peACEable KINGdom" by Edward Hicks)
B. ("girl with pEARl EARring" by Johannes Vermeer... the apparel is "EARRING")
C. ("Royal Red And Blue" by Mark Rothko; "royal reD AND BLUE"; DANDBLUE => DANBUE => DANUBE)
D. ("WHISTler’S MOTHER" by James Whistler; WHIST, SMOTHER)
E. ("The Scream" by Edvard Munch; "The Scream" => "I Scream" => ICE CREAM)
F. ("The Birth of Venus" by Sandro Botticelli; VENUS; EARTH, which rhymes with BIRTH)
G. ("American Gothic" by Grant Wood; "american gotHIC"; HICK)
H. ("Irises" by Vincent Van Gogh; IRI, SES)
A. ACE, KING; ("the peACEable KINGdom" by Edward Hicks)
B. ("girl with pEARl EARring" by Johannes Vermeer... the apparel is "EARRING")
C. ("Royal Red And Blue" by Mark Rothko; "royal reD AND BLUE"; DANDBLUE => DANBUE => DANUBE)
D. ("WHISTler’S MOTHER" by James Whistler; WHIST, SMOTHER)
E. ("The Scream" by Edvard Munch; "The Scream" => "I Scream" => ICE CREAM)
F. ("The Birth of Venus" by Sandro Botticelli; VENUS; EARTH, which rhymes with BIRTH)
G. ("American Gothic" by Grant Wood; "american gotHIC"; HICK)
H. ("Irises" by Vincent Van Gogh; IRI, SES)
Dessert Menu
Blood-Pump(k)in’ Dessert:
Halloweeners invite Vampires who bite!
Take a word associated with blood. A pair of interior adjacent letters in the word spell a spelled-out letter (like “ef” or “ex,” for example). Replace this pair with a letter that is NOT spelled-out (like “g” or “y,” for example). Then transpose this new letter with the letter to the right of it.
Move another interior letter two places later in the word.
The result is a word associated with Halloween.
What are these two words?
Answer:
hemoglobin, hobgoblin
hemoglobin => hBoglobin => hobglobin => hobgoblin => hobgoblin
Lego!
Hemoglobin, because it is associated with BLOOD, is therefore also associated with Halloween... as, of course, is HOBGOBLIN!
DeleteLegoWhoGuessesThatHalloweenGOBLINAroundTheGLOBEWillNextFallBeHobblin'Hobnobbin'NGobblin'!What'sMore...LegoLeGobblin'(AlsoOnThanksgiving!)
Regarding the official answer to App 4, "Snip Oz!" is not an anagram of "Ziploc". Was the caption supposed to be "Clip Oz"? If so, what does Oz have to do with the picture?
DeleteThank you, Nodd. Excellent editing! Yes indeed, my intended caption is "CLip Oz," not "SNip Oz."
DeleteThe chap in the barber's chair getting his "ears lowered" is Mehmet Oz, current administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) in the Trump administration.
He was a part of the answer to one of my puzzles that Will Shortz used on NPR several years ago that involved rotating an N to form a Z (Cinema's "Dr. No" to TV's "Dr. oZ").
LegoWhoWasGuiltyOf"NotGivingAFlip!"
Thanks, Lego. I thought it was just some stuffy New England dude in the chair. Dr. Oz never occurred to me. It should have, because I used his name in one of my past puzzles. (Air freshener brand for a TV doc = Wizard of Oz.)
Delete