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Listener 4223 Two Names By Verbascum
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A Happy New Year to all. What a pleasant and gentle start to the year! The theme appeared early and we have thoroughly enjoyed this. We haven't quite finished but progress is regular and speedy.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I resolved to start Listeners earlier this year, but was then thwarted by my computer and printer not talking to each other. Just solved both the problem and all the clues, so one full grid. I join others in looking at the misprint corrections and making no sense at all of them. Doesn't spell out mean that they should be in the right order or is that another twist to be worked out? Still plenty of time to sort things out - or am I just too thick to see the obvious? I'm also checking that I have all the misprints - I much prefer it when I know how many I am looking for. Laziness - I know.
Best wishes for 2013 to all. Intending to be at Chester - but only as a guest of a setter!
Best wishes for 2013 to all. Intending to be at Chester - but only as a guest of a setter!
I've been waiting for someone to ask that here, as a few have asked me privately and again, I fear there is ambiguity. The consensus seems to be the one word, since 'suitably' would demonstrate that we have understood and Mr Green always demonstrates considerable sense. However, a doubt lurks since the other way can only be there for a reason. The grid could easily have been compiled without it. Is it just one more example of what most of the extra letters spelled out?
Happy New Year to all. I have BRB12 and BRB11 and whichever edition came out in 1983 (because it's got a Listener Crossword bookplate in it). I have given all my other BRBs to deserving causes (usually the dwellings of friends with whom I stay from time to time). Will some kind person tell me whether the "earlier editions" which contain 36 are among the two (ie. 11 and 1983) which I still possess? I've tried all the obvious places to look, but without success. (The other two "earlier editions" lights posed no problem, and, as I said in a post a few weeks ago, I expect this form of words to appear regularly in order to cover the obvious need.)
Well that's my first Listener since August, having abandoned 2012 due to lack of time, and it's good to be back. Until I read the comments here I thought that was a nice gentle start to the year, filled in the grid at a leisurely pace, duly (and suitably) highlighted the misleading (and incontrovertibly monomial) example, and put it in the post. If there is an ambiguity it sailed over my head like a rogue 36.
Oh well. All correct so far in 2013.
emcee, TheBear69's observation about the constant concern seemed less a failure to understand the rubric than a query as to the point of that final flourish in the misprints? Connected to the theme, but to what purpose other than to give B a final balancing mention?
emcee, TheBear69's observation about the constant concern seemed less a failure to understand the rubric than a query as to the point of that final flourish in the misprints? Connected to the theme, but to what purpose other than to give B a final balancing mention?
A quick search through my past editions of Chambers reveals that 36A is in all my editions from 1972 to 2003, not under its own headword, but in brackets helping to explain a subhead phrase commonly associated with B...which is pretty obscure. But 36A appears not to be in the 11th (2008) edition or the current one. If stuck, it's probably easier to seek inspiration using Google!
Just to be clear, IainGrace is correct...I had no trouble with that or any other misprint. I just don't see any point to it. As for the bracketed expression, I think it is an example of a grammatical error in that the word 'which' refers not to it's immediate neighbor but to a prior word.
36a is in the Chambers CD-ROM under the same headword that presumably fortyseven refers to.
36a is in the Chambers CD-ROM under the same headword that presumably fortyseven refers to.
A nice gentlish start indeed. Without wishing to introduce a note of doubt, as we all boldly set off in pursuit of yet another elusive all-correct year of solving, does no one suspect Listener HQ of extreme deviousness: is it not just possible that the obvious highlight is indeed a (3,7) and that the correct answer, no doubt based on an early as yet unpublished Latin edition of A's work currently sitting undiscovered in some bookcase of a private Swedish library, lies elsewhere.
Just a thought.
Just a thought.
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