"Less and Less" - August 21, 2020
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Before I got my small nudge (which was just the word LESS) and solved the puzzle, I had actually looked up antonyms of the six nine-letter words, thinking that LESS might be used as something that means 'less innocuous', 'less cutthroat', etc. So close without knowing it! Generally I do not like puzzle that require synonyms, for some reason. Probably because there can be many of them for any single word, and only the right one will do, which seems kind of messy. But in this case, the right one had a key - the word LESS at the end.
Before that I had tried indexing the number of letters of the clue into the nine-letter word (strange how all the clues for the long answers were one-word clues, all LESS than nine letters!) I tried reading the title as L ESS AND L ESS, looking at all the L/S combos in the grid. The two words in the same row ending in ESS was not helpful.
Did anyone notice that the first letters of the first six Across clues spelled out SHIRTS? A six-letter word (!), just not a verb. An accidental meaningful acrostic of six letters is very rare, I would think.
Before that I had tried indexing the number of letters of the clue into the nine-letter word (strange how all the clues for the long answers were one-word clues, all LESS than nine letters!) I tried reading the title as L ESS AND L ESS, looking at all the L/S combos in the grid. The two words in the same row ending in ESS was not helpful.
Did anyone notice that the first letters of the first six Across clues spelled out SHIRTS? A six-letter word (!), just not a verb. An accidental meaningful acrostic of six letters is very rare, I would think.
- boharr
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Were you required to sing as well?Wendy Walker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 10:09 am I forgot to mention that I had a meta pre-dream on Wednesday night. In the dream I foolishly announced that I'd solved the meta -- then realized there was a part 2 to the puzzle, all in Spanish. One part even involved filling in letters on stepping stones across a creek.
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This was an incredibly brilliant puzzle! And challenging (your correspondent had to admit defeat, and is in awe of all the solvers who cracked it). We had 857 entries, about 80% correct. A large showing for near-miss REDUCE (52), plus some guesses: SHRINK (15), LESSEN (5), ERODED/ERODES (5) and sundry others.
Congrats to this week's winner: Eva Marostica of Boise, Idaho!
Congrats to this week's winner: Eva Marostica of Boise, Idaho!
- Wendy Walker
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Fortunately for all involved, no singing was required. I still cringe when I think about an audition I had 40 years ago where I had to sing my college's alma mater ("Noble Dickinsonia"). To no-one's surprise, I was cast in a non-singing role.boharr wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 11:16 amWere you required to sing as well?Wendy Walker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 10:09 am I forgot to mention that I had a meta pre-dream on Wednesday night. In the dream I foolishly announced that I'd solved the meta -- then realized there was a part 2 to the puzzle, all in Spanish. One part even involved filling in letters on stepping stones across a creek.
Good luck, fellow Muggles!
- sharkicicles
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I went down the rabbit hole of one-word clues on this one and didn't solve it, but at least the colors are pretty.
- cbarbee002
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I did the exact same thing - - looked at all the one-word clues, which were conveniently 6 for the theme clues, and 6 others. Had to work! (Not). Even with nudges regarding Less as a suffix, I couldn’t pull it through. Searched the grid for words that could be made synonyms by adding “less”, looking right over the obvious ones that just required removal of a letter. After seeing the word “Dreck” (new one for me), that should have clued me in.
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Same here. It's amazing how often I make the meta more complicated than it is..... A terrific meta...
- KscX
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4 1/2 months in I feel like I’m almost there for this type of “definition” and “relationship” mechanism - just need to push myself there as I tend to be more pattern-oriented.
ALSO- maybe I was late to the game but I think the star rating is an average of all the self-ratings, so make sure you rate it every week. At first I thought it was determined by the creator - maybe someone puts in a starting point? This was a four-star voyage for me, only to return to my departure point with my trip cancelled until Thursday.
ALSO- maybe I was late to the game but I think the star rating is an average of all the self-ratings, so make sure you rate it every week. At first I thought it was determined by the creator - maybe someone puts in a starting point? This was a four-star voyage for me, only to return to my departure point with my trip cancelled until Thursday.
- KayW
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Good going, Wendy - giving Matt & Mike even more nefarious ideas.Wendy Walker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 10:09 am I forgot to mention that I had a meta pre-dream on Wednesday night. In the dream I foolishly announced that I'd solved the meta -- then realized there was a part 2 to the puzzle, all in Spanish. One part even involved filling in letters on stepping stones across a creek.
Contest Crosswords Combating Cancer (CCCC) is a bundle of 16 metapuzzles created to help raise money for cancer-related charities. It is available at CrosswordsForCancer.com.
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I'm sorry if my comment was a spoiler. Not intentional. The mechanism I was referencing was, "find other words in the grid related to the theme and do something with them". I started metas in late 2019 and it seemed to be used every other week...Joe Ross wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 9:34 amKeep at it! Experience is necessary.mitchel674 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 8:42 am Frustrated by how bad I am at these Meta puzzles!
I can fill in the grid in just a few minutes but then spend the rest of my weekend staring. Sure I looked at the six long clues, but I simply could not make the next leap. If I get 10% of these, I'm lucky.
Wallowing!
Review several excellent solving techniques offered: Hints for Solving Meta Contests
Review past puzzles & solutions.
Understand that these WSJ Contest Crosswords are in their last month of their 5th year. Recent puzzles & their mechanisms are much more difficult than the first couple of years', including recent "easy" puzzles.
Share your progress & request verification & nudges from generous veterans. Pay attention to their techniques rather than each puzzle's final answer. Soon, you won't need verifications & nudges.
Further improve your skill by offering help to others. You'll be amazed at how this will improve your ability by having to explain the process - without giving away outright spoilers. This will force you to review logical steps to take in approaching all meta puzzles.
[EDIT1 following]
Dplass's Post #114 was an excellent gentle nudge, IMH&HO:
"...this mechanism [...] was used a LOT in 2019"
My nudge to the very few muggles who requested it of me via PM & to one who had immediately previously posted their need of one:
"review theme clues for awkwardness versus what is within grid"
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So who gets the mug? You or your SIL?EVJ wrote: ↑Sun Aug 23, 2020 10:09 pm I am on shore with S-I-L. It’s a good thing she came to my rescue. I couldn’t have done it without her. Two heads are better than one indeed! She reports she was drinking a Sangria while we texted back and forth across state lines to double-team this 100%er
Good luck to anyone still trying to come in under the wire!
Sara
- Jacksull
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Two things I loved about this week's meta:
The five letter words with the xtra letters were symmetrically located in the grid.
The answer was a verb that described the action that was was required --DEDUCT (one extra letter).
Note to self: If you see an entry that may be relevant to the answer or mechanism, check the symmetrical entry. And parse the title again.
The five letter words with the xtra letters were symmetrically located in the grid.
The answer was a verb that described the action that was was required --DEDUCT (one extra letter).
Note to self: If you see an entry that may be relevant to the answer or mechanism, check the symmetrical entry. And parse the title again.
Jack Sullivan
- joequavis
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Same here. Funny (annoying?) how some objectively more difficult metas come to me a lot easier. I received an unsolicited nudge, and that didn't help - I was doing exactly what the nudge suggested, and had been for 3 days. Just was never going to see it.
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It never ceases to amaze me how we Muggles can see some metas as easy and some as "I would never have gotten that one, no matter how long I stared at the grid/clues, etc." (And I seem to find myself in the latter camp most of the time.) This meta was one of those rare ones that came easily to me and I absolutely cannot explain why. The first thing I did this morning, as I do almost every Monday, was to check out LauraB’s comments on Crossword Fiend. I have to admit that a smug little smile came over my face when I read that she had to break down and ask for a nudge.
Sara
- C=64
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I got hung up on all of these (wrong) things as well. I *really* got hung up on seeing OR and ORE in the grid. (And the ORE IDA fries mentioned in another post.) I think I saw the SHIRTS but I can't remember for sure because my brain got toasted by this puzzle.Andrew Bradburn wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 11:07 am Before I got my small nudge (which was just the word LESS) and solved the puzzle, I had actually looked up antonyms of the six nine-letter words, thinking that LESS might be used as something that means 'less innocuous', 'less cutthroat', etc. So close without knowing it! Generally I do not like puzzle that require synonyms, for some reason. Probably because there can be many of them for any single word, and only the right one will do, which seems kind of messy. But in this case, the right one had a key - the word LESS at the end.
Before that I had tried indexing the number of letters of the clue into the nine-letter word (strange how all the clues for the long answers were one-word clues, all LESS than nine letters!) I tried reading the title as L ESS AND L ESS, looking at all the L/S combos in the grid. The two words in the same row ending in ESS was not helpful.
Did anyone notice that the first letters of the first six Across clues spelled out SHIRTS? A six-letter word (!), just not a verb. An accidental meaningful acrostic of six letters is very rare, I would think.
I just remembered that I thought I saw sandals in (LES)SANDLES(S) until I stopped and really thought about the spelling.
Last edited by C=64 on Mon Aug 24, 2020 3:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- LadyBird
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You must have been the one that I was bumping into in all those rabbit holes!Andrew Bradburn wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 11:07 am Before I got my small nudge (which was just the word LESS) and solved the puzzle, I had actually looked up antonyms of the six nine-letter words, thinking that LESS might be used as something that means 'less innocuous', 'less cutthroat', etc. So close without knowing it! Generally I do not like puzzle that require synonyms, for some reason. Probably because there can be many of them for any single word, and only the right one will do, which seems kind of messy. But in this case, the right one had a key - the word LESS at the end.
Before that I had tried indexing the number of letters of the clue into the nine-letter word (strange how all the clues for the long answers were one-word clues, all LESS than nine letters!) I tried reading the title as L ESS AND L ESS, looking at all the L/S combos in the grid. The two words in the same row ending in ESS was not helpful.
Did anyone notice that the first letters of the first six Across clues spelled out SHIRTS? A six-letter word (!), just not a verb. An accidental meaningful acrostic of six letters is very rare, I would think.
- whimsy
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While I did get this one the quickest ever for me, it was not until after I saw amorphous blots, a foolish guru, an ENT looking down someone's throat, and a vision of Trafalgar Square with Nelson up on his "plinth" (such a fun word to say!) Kicking myself for not having seen the fries sizzling in the oil --fun one! These puzzles are so entertaining in so many ways!
I guess Mike must believe that we'll be SMUG if we win the mug --- (hearty Congrats, BTW, EVJ!!) --- because he could have gone with slightly different entries in that area, using the ever-popular SMUT instead, thus requiring the do-it-in-your-sleep "JFK anticipation" for 65A, thereby giving him the chance to use the really nifty clue "Bawhston whirlybird" for 48D --- just sayin'!
I guess Mike must believe that we'll be SMUG if we win the mug --- (hearty Congrats, BTW, EVJ!!) --- because he could have gone with slightly different entries in that area, using the ever-popular SMUT instead, thus requiring the do-it-in-your-sleep "JFK anticipation" for 65A, thereby giving him the chance to use the really nifty clue "Bawhston whirlybird" for 48D --- just sayin'!
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Just like others in the dictionary camp, after noticing the clean grid of 6 longer adjectives clued by a short word, I looked up negligent on my phone. Careless was listed as a similar word. I looked across and saw CADRE. Care-LESS D. I had already tried to LOSE some letters in some of my other rabbit holes, knowing it's a Shenk mechanism. But this was the winner and it was so fun to go collect the rest of the 6 and form the clever verb 100% answer. Interestingly, when I then looked up the other 5 theme adjectives, the majority of them contained the -LESS word as synonyms.
- boharr
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Yup. That was a convincing pointer.