Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Listener No. 4380: Stomach My Mynot
42 Answers
I didn't even think of trying to fit the entries into the grid until I had cold-solved all but six. A couple of false starts, but as usual with this sort of puzzle once a few had slotted together the rest followed without too much trouble. Tough, though. Many thanks, MynoT.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I also cold-solved most of the clues and then metaphorically at least, started to throw it together, still without any understanding. I managed to get over half of the grid in before the penny finally dropped, and all became clear. Many thanks MynoT. That was much harder than your normal offerings, but well worth the effort.
Congratulations Jim.
Congratulations Jim.
Yes, how good to see that Jim won the Rasputin! (He also wrote a Listen With Others blog on it - http:// listenw ithothe rs.com/ 2016/01 /08/lis tener-4 377-rus sian-ro ulette- by-rasp utin/ - many thanks to Jim).
Indeed, our experience with MynoT's Stomach was the same as Starwalker's. An attractive gridfill then a long time to the p.d.m. Just right, though, for a January puzzle.
Indeed, our experience with MynoT's Stomach was the same as Starwalker's. An attractive gridfill then a long time to the p.d.m. Just right, though, for a January puzzle.
Let me get this straight. A jumbled set of answers cannot be fitted into the grid because the longest answers are too long for the longest grid entries and because the the totals of the various answer lengths don't match the grid anywhere. We're told a message will help us sort things out. If only. The trouble is that the message is jumbled with the clues, so to read the message we need to fill the grid, thus establishing the normal clue order, by which time the message is redundant because we've already completed the grid.
That reminds me, I must read Catch-22 again.
That reminds me, I must read Catch-22 again.
@scorpius: Just fill it in as best you can. The anomaly becomes readily apparent. Worry about the resolution later.
@tnap: I'm presuming that "modern" just indicates the current definition, and not past definitions.
My (slight) concern is that two of the anomalies can be resolved in two different ways, at least according to Wikipedia. I'm not conversant enough in the field to know which is the better resolution.
@tnap: I'm presuming that "modern" just indicates the current definition, and not past definitions.
My (slight) concern is that two of the anomalies can be resolved in two different ways, at least according to Wikipedia. I'm not conversant enough in the field to know which is the better resolution.
Fyellin, thanks for the encouragement, but my comment above wasn’t really a plea for help; I was simply highlighting the paradox of the puzzle’s construction. I cold-solved all but two clues, worked out the likely message, hoping that the unsolved clues didn’t have extra letters, then constructed the grid with ease based on the sequence of answers with extra letters.
I think the form of the final grid is very unclear. Wiki seems to suggest the forms recommended by an international scientific body, which seems to be what AlHearer has in mind, but are the other forms ‘unscientific’? Whether they are or not, the grid would look far more interesting with them.
AHearer, to address your point about abbreviations consider an analogy in a completely different field: Fe is the xxxxxx for iron, so I don’t see a contradiction in using the forms you allude to.
I think the form of the final grid is very unclear. Wiki seems to suggest the forms recommended by an international scientific body, which seems to be what AlHearer has in mind, but are the other forms ‘unscientific’? Whether they are or not, the grid would look far more interesting with them.
AHearer, to address your point about abbreviations consider an analogy in a completely different field: Fe is the xxxxxx for iron, so I don’t see a contradiction in using the forms you allude to.
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