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Fao - The K M Players

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seekeerz | 00:10 Sat 14th Jan 2023 | Quizzes & Puzzles
17 Answers
Here are today’s shaded clues for you -

21a. Colour named after the dianthus, a flower used by Shakespeare in Romeo and Juliet to symbolise the epitome of perfection (4)

36a. A pomaceous orchard fruit pressed for cider etc (5)

56a Byname of John II, the French king also known as Jean le Bon. (4)

59a. A mixture of red and yellow, complimentary of blue. (6)

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Thanks Steff and good evening all. 21a. Pink 36a. Apple 56a. Good 59a. Orange
00:13 Sat 14th Jan 2023
rose
apple
good
green
sorry, green is wrong!
Thanks Steff and good evening all.

21a. Pink

36a. Apple

56a. Good

59a. Orange
orange?
Well done Twix!
Question Author
Ok I think it’s Pink, though I’m not sure ….I know the Rose connection with R&J, not sure about a Pink one ….the heats not doing my brain any favours :(
Well I'm certainly confused!

From a gardening perspective, 'pink' is clearly right for 21a:
https://www.gardenersworld.com/how-to/grow-plants/dianthus-grow-guide/

However it definitely doesn't fit from a literary perspective! Quote:
"Shakespeare uses “pink” four times in his works: in The Taming of the Shrew (c. 1590-1591) to describe a pair of shoes that are un-pinked (undecorated) in the heel (4.1.119); in Romeo and Juliet (c. 1595) for wordplay over Pink the flower and courtesy (2.1.54-55); in Antony and Cleopatra (c. 1606) where reference to Bacchus (the God of wine) with “pink eyen” embellishes a drunken scene and mirrors, perhaps, the squinting eyes of inebriated revellers (2.7.110-11); and in All Is True (Henry VIII), written with John Fletcher (c. 1613), to describe a “pinked porringer”, i.e. a hat decorated with pinks, worn by a haberdasher’s wife (5.2.35-38). None of these references refer to ‘pink the colour’ because this colour term is not generally used as an adjective until at least the middle of the 17th century and, as a sole colour term, must wait for the Restoration of 1660."

Source:
https://journals.openedition.org/erea/4435

Hi Steff.

Dianthus, which are related to carnations, are also known as pinks. Although not a gardener, I have planted many dianthus on my son's grave over the years, as they are both small and flower for a long time if dead-headed regularly.
Question Author
We’ll go with ‘pink’ before I get anymore confwubbled !!

Thanks Chris for overload of info …I’ll have to study it properly :))
The 'literary' answer to 21a, rather than the gardening one, must surely be 'rose':
"What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet;
So Romeo would, were he not Romeo call'd,
Retain that dear perfection which he owes
Without that title"
[Juliet, Act II, Scene II, Romeo and Juliet]
Question Author
Hi twix - yes I’m very familiar with dianthus, I love the fragrance and they do last so well ….I’ve just cut mine right back.
Question Author
Oh shoes !! Chris, you’ve just mucked up all my thinking ….we should sack Kate I think…she’s muddling her metaphors …now I’d better go back to the crossword again…or. What’s a lady’s flat-topped hat ?? Possibly starting with R
^
forget that, its a mans hat : ((
Question Author
Ok Sorted. Bad clue, she trying to confuse us ..not hard..going with Pink.
Question Author
Hi Sam …come and join in !! I’ve finally found the hat, it’s a plateau …glad I’m not wearing it !!
Glad you got it sorted seekz.
Hope this finds you well x

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