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16a. nobleman's charge for drink, dr?p, I assume answer is drop but just don't get wordplay any help please.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You've omitted the word 'foreign' from the clue. I didn't really get going on the X-word until today, but I think it just might be drap, the Scottish version of drop, a drink. Drap is French (foreign) for flag and one meaning of charge is any device on the shield of a coat-of-arms. That could conceivably be a flag, of course. If that is correct, nobleman's is the extra word.
Forgive me if I've barked up the utterly wrong tree!
Forgive me if I've barked up the utterly wrong tree!
I'm quite amused, because I now recall that 'drap' is French for 'sheet', not 'flag'. Still, flag is DRAPeau so I got more than half of it, which isn't bad given that I've had nothing to do with French for over half a century. Perhaps some particularly amorous knight...Sir BEDivere?... may have had a sheet as part of his escutcheon!
I've always tried to offer you assistance in the past, Gribble, and I'm glad you feel it was a genuine help to you. Sorry to have been so wildly out of kilter this time. Cheers
I've always tried to offer you assistance in the past, Gribble, and I'm glad you feel it was a genuine help to you. Sorry to have been so wildly out of kilter this time. Cheers