Quizzes & Puzzles47 mins ago
Listener 4165, Variation on a Theme by Nibor
94 Answers
Not much here to cause any grief this week, I think. Not too high on the difficulty scale, but enjoyable anyway.
Now I have no excuses for the afternoon and will be forced to finally clean out my gutters. 65 degrees today - 40 on Sunday. I guess I'll get busy.
Now I have no excuses for the afternoon and will be forced to finally clean out my gutters. 65 degrees today - 40 on Sunday. I guess I'll get busy.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by dr b. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I finally plodded my way through this, and see some sort of logic in the highlighting.
But I have one slight problem. I can't work out the wordplay to 2D, so I'm unsure of the unchecked letter. What I take to be the definition could be an active or a passive past tense, creating different vowels. I've checked the definitions of mucker and Morocco in the BRB without light dawning. Any hints?
But I have one slight problem. I can't work out the wordplay to 2D, so I'm unsure of the unchecked letter. What I take to be the definition could be an active or a passive past tense, creating different vowels. I've checked the definitions of mucker and Morocco in the BRB without light dawning. Any hints?
A few years ago I might have thought this denouement was quite clever but older and frankly busier than I used to be I'm afraid I just found it irritating. The actual puzzle was lovely, especially the clues, but as far as I'm concerned the last step seemed deliberately perverse.
Like someone else who has posted much earlierI couldn't see the point of the gris clashes, and I remain baffled by the choice of the "sporty" representation.
One thing I would defend the last step on: there is, surely, absolutely no ambiguity about it, is there?
Like someone else who has posted much earlierI couldn't see the point of the gris clashes, and I remain baffled by the choice of the "sporty" representation.
One thing I would defend the last step on: there is, surely, absolutely no ambiguity about it, is there?
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.