News0 min ago
Listener 4199 Scattered by Kea
100 Answers
What a pleasure to see a Kea puzzle but what a tough solve. No, not really opening the Friday club as I still have to produce my final grid and there is some demanding word play to sort out but many thanks to Kea for an astonishingly challenging puzzle!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Ruthrobin. 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.Jim (hijacking thread again),
As a classicist from t'other place I also enjoyed your essay into Herodotus. But as I am sure you know from your Physics reply, there comes a time when you have too much specialist knowledge, and it leaves you tongue-tied. And I can understand what you were going through, having muffed a number of questions in the bottom right seat some 36 years ago.
As a classicist from t'other place I also enjoyed your essay into Herodotus. But as I am sure you know from your Physics reply, there comes a time when you have too much specialist knowledge, and it leaves you tongue-tied. And I can understand what you were going through, having muffed a number of questions in the bottom right seat some 36 years ago.
Heh well, at least you appeared on it too. PS if You sent me an email then I might let you in on a little secret...
[email protected]
[email protected]
Have now got the elusive 11a, and then realised that I had one wrong. I now have a possible solution which involves changing 7 more letters, but I'm not sure about the meaning of the three words, as to my mind it is impossible to take it literally as there only seems to be one possible alternative word for one of the clashes and that involves letters other than I would expect if I was taking it literally. I'll give my brain a rest and pick some more blackcurrants. I could do with some help with those as well!
What a stunning de tour force. I believe that there are three completely novel ideas here:
1. The source. I don't recall this having been done before.
2. The grid construction. To have transformed the source in this way is impressive enough, but to have done so constrained by the 16-letter description and to have piled on 90 degree symmetry uses up all superlatives.
3. The clues. I don't remember having seen definitions constructed in this way before.
Can anyone recall precedents for any of this?
PS: Could it be that Kea and Prunella modularis are birds of the same feather? :>)
1. The source. I don't recall this having been done before.
2. The grid construction. To have transformed the source in this way is impressive enough, but to have done so constrained by the 16-letter description and to have piled on 90 degree symmetry uses up all superlatives.
3. The clues. I don't remember having seen definitions constructed in this way before.
Can anyone recall precedents for any of this?
PS: Could it be that Kea and Prunella modularis are birds of the same feather? :>)
I'm still struggling at the back of the class and am unable even to come up with an intelligent stab at the phrase constituted by the hidden letters, despite having 80% of them and some intriguing words emerging. Ah well, I shall be reading the solution with interest. A shame I've floundered at such an early stage because the clues so far have been a joy to solve.
Staurologist I would agree entirely with your first two points. The first two rely on the setter having...I cant really write want I want to write as it will be giving too much away. To pull it off is purely astonishing. Your third point I am sure it has been done before, although I will have to rack my memory to find them. I created a puzzle using just one-word definitions in this way about four years ago. I believe the two birds have no connection (only the fact of adding an I into genus).
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.