Quizzes & Puzzles13 mins ago
Listener 4325, Christmas Break By Poat
20 Answers
The theme has had a lot of exposure recently, but that does not detract from this delightful treatment by Poat. All comes together in a most pleasing way.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Agreed, excellent puzzle with a lot of thematic content. Took a little while to tidy up the last few answers and justify wordplays working backwards from the theme. Was also sidetracked for a short time by a seasonal cartoon ! A very Merry Christmas to all who contribute to, or just peruse, this site.
I agree with s_pugh about 15a, which for me is an &lit that doesn't quite come off. That and 3d were my last solves and although I'd earlier considered the answer for 15 I was not convinced until I determined what letter was needed to complete the left-hand column. It's years since I read the book, but I don't think the Chambers definition, with it's important six-letter adjective, is an accurate description of the incident.
Minor quibble out of the way, I thought it was an excellent puzzle with lots of fine clues, great fun to solve. Unlike some, the theme wasn't obvious to me at the start. In fact it wasn't obvious until I spotted a likely expression from the rejects. Until then I was thinking cartoons.
On an editorial matter, this is the second time recently that a Scrabble dictionary has been given as a reference. In the case of an unfamiliar word that is not a variant of a Chambers word one needs to check the meaning, so a dictionary, not a Scrabble list, is essential, however straightforward the wordplay. I checked my answer to 30d on the internet and found it appears in at least three dictionaries, so why isn't one of those given as the non-standard reference? Seems bizarre to me.
Minor quibble out of the way, I thought it was an excellent puzzle with lots of fine clues, great fun to solve. Unlike some, the theme wasn't obvious to me at the start. In fact it wasn't obvious until I spotted a likely expression from the rejects. Until then I was thinking cartoons.
On an editorial matter, this is the second time recently that a Scrabble dictionary has been given as a reference. In the case of an unfamiliar word that is not a variant of a Chambers word one needs to check the meaning, so a dictionary, not a Scrabble list, is essential, however straightforward the wordplay. I checked my answer to 30d on the internet and found it appears in at least three dictionaries, so why isn't one of those given as the non-standard reference? Seems bizarre to me.
I managed to finish this enjoyable puzzle this morning while it was all quiet in the house. I agree with Scorpius about both Proust and the Scrabble dictionary, which shouldn't be a legitimate reference text. Scrabblers are not interested in the meanings of words, only in the fact that particular strings of letters are legal in the game. 30 across is not in fact a proper word, but an error based on the mistaken impression that the true word is a plural. There is, however, a quotation in in OED that includes it.
Can I point members of the Listenerati to last Saturday's Inquisitor in the Indie.
An excellent puzzle from Nimrod.
[ does anyone know if there is an online/printable version of the Inquisitors? I only see them on the odd occasions when I treat myself to a full Saturday Indie rather than just an 'i' ]
An excellent puzzle from Nimrod.
[ does anyone know if there is an online/printable version of the Inquisitors? I only see them on the odd occasions when I treat myself to a full Saturday Indie rather than just an 'i' ]
I haven't been doing too well on the Listener lately and this one just about stretched me to the limit of my capabilities (and was all the more enjoyable for that). There were some lovely clues. 14A really made me chuckle. I still don't understand 35A, where the wordplay seems to result in too long an entry. I agree that the 30A/30D entries were not acceptable. Having two entries not in Chambers sharing a letter is surely not on.
Cagey, the point is that the correct singular looks like a plural.
Cagey, the point is that the correct singular looks like a plural.
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