I'm happy to offer a nudge. Just PM me with what you have so far!HeadinHome wrote: Wed May 10, 2023 7:35 pmwhat Ergcat said. Intrigued but stuck.Ergcat wrote: Tue May 09, 2023 12:45 pm grid done...wrote down a few things but not seeing a path across the moat. might have to table this for a while.....
"Let Stalk Strine" by benchen71
- benchen71
- Posts: 3400
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta! 

- benchen71
- Posts: 3400
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Another 24 hours and another 6 solvers have appeared, bringing us to 17:
woozy
Berto
ChrisKochmanski
CPJohnson
Cindy Heisler
Pair O Ducks
Nudges will appear imminently...
woozy
Berto
ChrisKochmanski
CPJohnson
Cindy Heisler
Pair O Ducks
Nudges will appear imminently...
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta! 

- benchen71
- Posts: 3400
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Nudges, in order of increasing blatancy:
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta! 

- HeadinHome
- Posts: 1459
- Joined: Sun Apr 26, 2020 9:06 am
- Location: Charlotte, NC
Got it this morning with an overnight nudge from Ben. Moat crossed with floaties.
The other Wendy. 

-
- Posts: 3159
- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2021 7:26 pm
- Location: at the intersection of grits and breakfast tacos
Quoting and clarifying benchen71's most blatant nudge, so don't click any of these if you don't want to be spoiled.
I found only , so I must be missing something. I still got there, though, so it must be a minor oversight.
I don't have anything clever to say, but if I did, it would go here.
Eli
Eli
- MikeyG
- Posts: 1925
- Joined: Wed Dec 30, 2020 2:52 pm
- Location: Chicago
- Contact:
I have some trepidation to start this one with how tough it seems to be playing, but I'll go for it!
Edit #1: What I presumed would be the mechanism is not it, haha.
Edit #2: Apparently, with the nudges, that's pretty much it, but I need to brush up on my strine!
Edit #1: What I presumed would be the mechanism is not it, haha.
Edit #2: Apparently, with the nudges, that's pretty much it, but I need to brush up on my strine!
- edestlin
- Posts: 294
- Joined: Sun Apr 10, 2022 9:22 am
- Location: Michigan
- Contact:
My silly mistake held me back from what was already a tough meta, but I learned a bunch and enjoyed the heck out of this one. Thanks, Ben!
-
- Posts: 1126
- Joined: Thu Dec 31, 2020 11:57 am
- Location: Atlanta, GA
Well, I'm across the moat, but only because Ben personally guided me across. Fortunately, my degree is not in linguistics, so no shame there.
Matthew
-
- Posts: 919
- Joined: Mon Jun 22, 2020 8:12 pm
- Location: Seneca SC
Crossed the moat with nudge #4 and a small speech lesson from @benchen71 !! Fun meta!
- woozy
- Posts: 3174
- Joined: Mon Aug 10, 2020 12:40 am
hoover wrote: Thu May 11, 2023 11:57 am Quoting and clarifying benchen71's most blatant nudge, so don't click any of these if you don't want to be spoiled.
I found only , so I must be missing something. I still got there, though, so it must be a minor oversight.
GUAVA is not an anagram of VAGUE
- benchen71
- Posts: 3400
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Since the nudges, the following solvers have made it to the answer:
HeadinHome
Jaclyn
Casey Callaghan
MrTheHan
edestlin
MatthewL
Bird Lives
Ergcat
DrTom
That brings us to 26. There will be one more solver update, immediately before the answer reveal Monday morning Australia time.
HeadinHome
Jaclyn
Casey Callaghan
MrTheHan
edestlin
MatthewL
Bird Lives
Ergcat
DrTom
That brings us to 26. There will be one more solver update, immediately before the answer reveal Monday morning Australia time.
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta! 

- lbray53
- Posts: 1509
- Joined: Fri May 08, 2020 8:34 am
- Location: Elkhorn, WI
I submitted an answer that was accepted on Crosshare after additional prompts from Ben. Good on yous that got it. I am not a bludger. Maybe a dill. Just not easy for me.
My avatar proves that it is sometimes better to be lucky than good!
- ReB
- Posts: 772
- Joined: Sun Mar 29, 2020 9:34 pm
- Location: East Tennessee
Finally hallucinated my way across the MOAT after 5 days of futility.
- benchen71
- Posts: 3400
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Final solver update bringing us up to 28:
lbray53
ReB
lbray53
ReB
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta! 

- benchen71
- Posts: 3400
- Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2021 8:50 pm
- Location: Melbourne, Australia
- Contact:
Here's the solution to "Let Stalk Strine":
... which is what I have been for quite a number of you this week!
My original intention was for you, the successful solver, to realise that what I had been doing in this meta was "tutoring" you how to pronounce words like a fair dinkum Aussie! But then, quite early on, I made my offer of private nudges - rather than just running the official nudges earlier than normal. So I ended up doing quite a lot of "tutoring" by PM, too. Hopefully, you appreciated the way things all came together in the end.
While the seed for this puzzle was the mispronunciation of the word "emu", I did have a secondary motive in constructing this puzzle. Occasionally, metas published in the WSJ or MGWCC involve pronouncing words or sounding out a word with letters, and so on. In cases like these it is usually necessary to use US-pronunciation. Now that is absolutely to be expected since these puzzles are constructed by US people, and the audience for these puzzles is predominantly US-based. But for those of us outside of the US, those puzzles can sometimes be harder than they were intended to be. So when I put this puzzle together I was conscious of the fact that it might be more challenging for anyone not familiar with the Australian accent. If you found it hard, just spare a thought for those of us outside of the US when the next US-accent-specific puzzle comes out!
... which is what I have been for quite a number of you this week!

My original intention was for you, the successful solver, to realise that what I had been doing in this meta was "tutoring" you how to pronounce words like a fair dinkum Aussie! But then, quite early on, I made my offer of private nudges - rather than just running the official nudges earlier than normal. So I ended up doing quite a lot of "tutoring" by PM, too. Hopefully, you appreciated the way things all came together in the end.
While the seed for this puzzle was the mispronunciation of the word "emu", I did have a secondary motive in constructing this puzzle. Occasionally, metas published in the WSJ or MGWCC involve pronouncing words or sounding out a word with letters, and so on. In cases like these it is usually necessary to use US-pronunciation. Now that is absolutely to be expected since these puzzles are constructed by US people, and the audience for these puzzles is predominantly US-based. But for those of us outside of the US, those puzzles can sometimes be harder than they were intended to be. So when I put this puzzle together I was conscious of the fact that it might be more challenging for anyone not familiar with the Australian accent. If you found it hard, just spare a thought for those of us outside of the US when the next US-accent-specific puzzle comes out!
Check out "The MOAT Mini Pack of Marching Bands" here. US$5 gets you 7 Marching Bands which, hard enough on their own, now contain metas too. And once again there's a mega-meta! 

- MikeyG
- Posts: 1925
- Joined: Wed Dec 30, 2020 2:52 pm
- Location: Chicago
- Contact:
I didn't get the puzzle whose answer is my job. 
Great puzzle and message, Ben!

Great puzzle and message, Ben!
- Alvibu67
- Posts: 195
- Joined: Thu Dec 31, 2020 2:18 pm
- Location: Santa Cruz, CA
Great puzzle!
I’ve always been fascinated by how to represent any word phonetically so someone from any language background could pronounce it. Many Asian languages with tones, or languages with throat sounds or clicks, would be very tricky to represent, but it should be possible.
English has so many pronunciation exceptions, it’s even more difficult.
Like GHOTI is pronounced “fish”: GH as in tough, O as in women, and TI as in nation.
Crazy language!
Allison
I’ve always been fascinated by how to represent any word phonetically so someone from any language background could pronounce it. Many Asian languages with tones, or languages with throat sounds or clicks, would be very tricky to represent, but it should be possible.
English has so many pronunciation exceptions, it’s even more difficult.
Like GHOTI is pronounced “fish”: GH as in tough, O as in women, and TI as in nation.
Crazy language!
Allison