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EV 925 Gwent's Tall Yew by Kruger
55 Answers
Good afternoon Mr. and Mrs. UK and all ships at sea....
I thought this was a perfectly fine puzzle, not an earth-shattering PDM but solidly constructed nonetheless. And and am I wrong in seeing an extra letter in the wordplay of 42a, that does not in fact appear in the quote?
I somehow stumbled upon how to treat the 8 answers before having the quote, so I did not fully appreciate the nature of those 8 answers until that point.
I thought this was a perfectly fine puzzle, not an earth-shattering PDM but solidly constructed nonetheless. And and am I wrong in seeing an extra letter in the wordplay of 42a, that does not in fact appear in the quote?
I somehow stumbled upon how to treat the 8 answers before having the quote, so I did not fully appreciate the nature of those 8 answers until that point.
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.It is an excellent, Mark Twainy sort of word. I found this:
We do not know the origin of hornswoggle. We do know that it belongs to a group of "fancified" words that were particularly popular in the American West in the 19th century. Hornswoggle is one of the earliest, first appearing around 1829. It is possible that these words were invented to poke fun at the more "sophisticated" East. Some other words of this ilk are absquatulate, also first appearing in the 1820s, skedaddle, first attested in 1861 in Missouri, and discombobulate, first recorded in 1916.
Now I can't decide if I am going to skedaddle or absquatulate.
We do not know the origin of hornswoggle. We do know that it belongs to a group of "fancified" words that were particularly popular in the American West in the 19th century. Hornswoggle is one of the earliest, first appearing around 1829. It is possible that these words were invented to poke fun at the more "sophisticated" East. Some other words of this ilk are absquatulate, also first appearing in the 1820s, skedaddle, first attested in 1861 in Missouri, and discombobulate, first recorded in 1916.
Now I can't decide if I am going to skedaddle or absquatulate.
We tend to agree with you Copelander - have been searching for a justification but I think we must have come to the same conclusions you have.
Have found out so much about an entirely new subject - well, not so much new, just not attributed in the past! All very fascinating, and a thank you to Kruger for making me do some interesting research. If Auntie isn't on strike in September I might even recall some of it.
Have found out so much about an entirely new subject - well, not so much new, just not attributed in the past! All very fascinating, and a thank you to Kruger for making me do some interesting research. If Auntie isn't on strike in September I might even recall some of it.
Apropos of nothing, I will be off for the next two EVs (annual hiking trip awaits) so I will next be joining the fray for EV 928, assuming I don't fall into a crevasse. I will absquatulate, or possibly skedaddle, or perhaps just shove off, in a few days.
Enjoy the EVing, Ning and Cing in the meantime.
Enjoy the EVing, Ning and Cing in the meantime.
Not meaning to obfuscate and confuse, DocHH. I was just researching the author of the quotation (in the interests of tieing the title to the theme) - not someone I knew about previously, so a completely new subject to me. However, I had come across some of his work but not realised it was him - if you see what I mean. Rumour has it that the BBC is going on strike towards the end of the summer.
Happy hiking, dr b - we are not jealous....
Happy hiking, dr b - we are not jealous....
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