Society & Culture1 min ago
EV 946 Message by Rustic
23 Answers
Good afternoon all. This was certainly a nice challenge. The theme was not surprising but getting to the message took a bit of work - double clues and missing letters! I don't understand the wordplay on 13d and got hung up for a bit by placing the 5d/28d combo in the wrong cells. But I endorse the message and wish it for all the N&Cers.
Merry Christmas everyone!
Merry Christmas everyone!
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.Afternoon, dr b. I also thought this was much trickier than normal. I think 13dn is an anagram (i.e. preposterous) of a four letter word for skin. But I'm baffled by 18ac, as the footballer is spelt differently, there's no homophone indicator in the clue, and why there is a Z with a hacek above it rather than an e eludes me. Heigh ho. Season's greetings one and all!
Good news; we were allowed to make lots and lots of new friends on the M1 last night. What jolly fun we had... It allowed us to discover a new (to us) hotel not far from Junction 13 and we were persuaded to leave all the festivities and enjoy a large glass of wine and a comfy bed.
We have now reached our destination and unfrozen the BRB. Looking forward to tackling this, and the Listener, in due course.
We have now reached our destination and unfrozen the BRB. Looking forward to tackling this, and the Listener, in due course.
Ignorance is bliss, dr b. It would be nice to think that Harry was getting long overdue recognition in EV, but I fear it's just a blunder. This spelling should have been clued as an Oxford college. There is a homophonous player who is now a well-known BBC anchorman. Reached his half-century last month, and famous for never being booked or sent off in his career. I hesitate to say this to one from across the pond, but solvers might reasonably have be expected to have heard of him. As famous as Joe Montana or John Elway in the other form of the game.
I had heard of the BBC guy, vaguely. To be fair, when I Googled "footballer (grid answer)" Google came back with "Did you mean 'footballer (BBC guy)' "? So even Google knows who he is. But if you were to ask an average American to name 3 soccer players, you'd get Pele, Beckham and a blank stare. So perhaps he's as famous over here as Phil Simms would be over there.
copelander, the sea is the one found in Central Asia and many crossword puzzles; since you probably have the first letter of the message, Chambers Word Wizard can do the required anagramming. You will then discover that the answer is an alternate spelling of an obscure word! So, 1d was my last in as well.
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