Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Listener No 4478 Chapstick By Tangram
17 Answers
This was pretty tough. I have three of the five characters, so i hope it's just a matter of time and that I can shortly get back to listening and not listener. Highly engrossing - many thanks to Tangram.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Slow but steady solving the clues. The misprints and missing letters were very well disguised, but for once I didn't have two or more alternatives for any of the generated letters. I'm one solver who really appreciates such scrupulous unambiguity so chapeau to Tangram.
I suspect the theme may be rather like a certain yeasty spread. I suspect that solvers without good knowledge of the subject will struggle to find two of the names - I had to guess and check one of them and I'm a fan. That said, a logical guess at the form of the final highlighting may well compensate for this.
Thanks Tangram.
I suspect the theme may be rather like a certain yeasty spread. I suspect that solvers without good knowledge of the subject will struggle to find two of the names - I had to guess and check one of them and I'm a fan. That said, a logical guess at the form of the final highlighting may well compensate for this.
Thanks Tangram.
I was temporarily miffed by the thought that I might have to own the pricey reference work to fully complete this, but it turned out to be easily enough findable online - which I suppose they knew. Another person for whom the theme might as well be in Sanskrit here, but the instructions seem to be enough to get you there even if you have no idea about the finer points at stake. A nice not too taxing Listener, thanks Tangram.
Hmm. Seem to have the right number of characters and squares, but not sure I’m certain of the result so guess I could be wrong. Found further thematic character which adds to the show but busts the preamble! Some tough clues to tease out, especially the short ones and the message stayed hidden for a long time.
The trickiest part of this puzzle was getting a coherent statement from the misprinted/missing letters. I must have spent as long working out it out fully as on completing most of the grid (which didn't take long).
My ignorance of the theme is second to none, so I would have expected to struggle, but I am familiar with the two names in a line, so the rest was pretty easy since the stylised object revealed three others that I was able to check on the internet.
I wouldn't say 44a is dodgy. It's tricky to get (it was my last solve), but it's no dodgier than any double definition clue. It's probably intended as a & lit. The misprinted clue gives us wordplay and an overlapping definition; the corrected clue gives us another definition.
My ignorance of the theme is second to none, so I would have expected to struggle, but I am familiar with the two names in a line, so the rest was pretty easy since the stylised object revealed three others that I was able to check on the internet.
I wouldn't say 44a is dodgy. It's tricky to get (it was my last solve), but it's no dodgier than any double definition clue. It's probably intended as a & lit. The misprinted clue gives us wordplay and an overlapping definition; the corrected clue gives us another definition.
I respectfully disagree with you about 44, Scorpius. I’d have expected a clue to stand up under its own right following the correction of a misprint, and I cannot see how this does (unless I’m missing something).
I prefer the term ‘non-standard’ to ‘dodgy’, as I welcome the principle of innovation.
In this specific case, however, I didn’t like it, personally.
I prefer the term ‘non-standard’ to ‘dodgy’, as I welcome the principle of innovation.
In this specific case, however, I didn’t like it, personally.
Icynorth, this is not the first time we have had a clue like 44a. It's fairly rare, but I don't think it is non-standard. Solvers are told that there is a misprint in the definition, so that needs correcting, but the wordplay is not affected. In the case of an & lit clue, where the whole clue is both wordplay and definition, we end up with both the original clue, which is wordplay, and the amended clue, all of which is definition. I believe Azed accepts such clues in his clue competition. When I first encountered a clue of this sort it took me a while to get my head round it and accept it. Now I'm comfortable with it.
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