![]() Oof.Īn AIRGUN is a thing in auto repair shops, to paint a car. DOGGY BAG, NO, WAIT! (har), SMIDGE, MINION, BAR ROOM. Liked the anagram theme with synonyms of 'mixing'. They're interesting and fun! So many DIY gadgets! Plus appliances, like Sunbeam MIXMASTERs!įun puz! Figured Rex would praise the fact of a woman constructor, but I guess he is truly equal rights as he bashed this one as much as a male constructor! If it would help, may I respectfully suggest that you spend a couple of hours some rainy Binghamton day in a Lowes or Home Depot. But in the 3-letter category, can the NT please retire AM I, EMU, ERR, ODE, ORU, and RRR for a few weeks?Īnd I have a better clue for GOP: "The first sound that Congressional leaders make when asked to comment on the POTUS's latest I've noticed that you seem to struggle with hardware names, like AIR GUN. Some nice new words, as already mentioned. Speaking of time, this one tied with my average, so a medium rating from me. (Checking on this I just learned that some railway timetables display 00:00 to indicate departure times and 24:00 to indicate arrival times. If anybody is bothered by the fact TWELVE o'clock can also refer to midnight, may I suggest that they lobby for the USA to join the rest of the world and adopt the 24-hour time system, in which midnight is 00:00 or. That even a broken clock tells the right time twice a day doesn't bother me. TWELVE was actually the first answer I slotted in, though I couldn't initially get any downs from it. I mean, isn't that what one does with letter tiles in SCRAbBLE? I was going to claim a Natick at the crossing of EMMET Brickowski and BEBE Neuwirth, but I suppose the former would have been inferable if I hadn't jumped on MAD SCRAbBLE, which in my SCRAMBLEd morning mindset seemed to make sense. I've not seen the Lego flic, nor is it high on my to-DO list. nothing TRUER! (And slow down when you get to the big bend, or you'll miss the turn!)īasically, what at 1:44 AM said. Half the reason I'm going on here is to put off doing my second round of daily physical therapy for my knee. If you just know Abba that well you're welcome to it. It's been referenced only once before on some Sunday puzzle that I'm sure I didn't do. I don't mind not knowing the Abba trivia. There's a symmetry to how it paired up with the (so lame it's good) PAYER and how the obscure EMMET is mated with the (so generic it's good) MADE. IMPUTE was another word I need to hone up on. Like many of these early week NYT puzzles this provided some learning opportunities to compensate for the lack of solving experience it provided. I wound up with just over a Tuesday time. However once STIRFRIED went in so did MARSCRAMBLE and it was all Monday speed after that. This was inspite of having ERIN and RABBI in place. ![]() You throw in a couple of personal weak points like EMMET and WEAL and I wound up having to use the NE corner to get the puzzle going. In retrospect TWELVE and MEE were pretty obvious but I initially brain farted them. The top tier started with some resistance. pick real people, or much, much more famous fictional characters for your name clues, please. And ugh, the EMMET clue ( 7D: _ Brickowski, protagonist of "The Lego Movie"). I don't mind the core theme concept, actually, though the answer set could probably be stronger. Lots of a T Rex's skeleton seems big to me, I dunno. FOTO? RRR? Paint device-had GUN, no idea about AIR. But I guess that's what "course" is, too? Oof. Had no idea VECTOR meant "course" ( 5D: Airplane course)-I think of it as a direction. ![]() Nests, webs, oxygen! Booooo to that clue. Animals and plants "make" a lot of stuff. LESSEE just screams "here are a bunch of common letters!" 15A: Not occurring naturally is MADE? Lots of things occur in nature that are MADE. Mostly I found the fill, and especially the clues, just a terrible grind. ![]() I know the DAILY JUMBLE as just the Jumble, so that was weird. Is it something else? Oh, looks like it's a trademark for a food processor. Could not quickly anagram STREAM into anything that made sense, and even as I got crosses, nothing looked right. Concept wasn't terribly hard to pick up, despite the lack of a revealer, but each one was its own little struggle. I didn't like that three of these themers were noun phrases and two were verb phrases. "MAD" can mean mixed-up, and so can "FRIED" (though the latter may be a little more tenuous). A couple of these answers ( MAD SCRAMBLE, STIR FRIED) are notable for the fact that either of the words in each answer could technically be an anagram trigger word, i.e. I'm guessing the whole concept sprang from BIPOLAR DISORDER, a nice, grid-spanning answer. "wild" "crazy" "strange" etc.) and that helps you figure out the answer (cryptic clues have a literal component as well as a wordplay component, as you probably know). You look for that word that can signal anagram (e.g. I mean, it's just a cryptic cluing technique.
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