"Three by Three" - November 5, 2021
- Kas
- Posts: 311
- Joined: Thu Jul 11, 2019 9:23 pm
- Location: Usually in a rabbit hole.
- mheberlingx100
- Posts: 614
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I also went at the French rabbit hole with pick and shovel. I tried listing all the three letter French words I could find in the grid to no avail. I thought the lower right “surrey” might be “sur riz” (on rice) or “sur ris” (on and laugh) which of course was nonsense. I also spent some time on Louis XIV (le roi soleil) trying to make SAL ATE into “soleil”. Nothing there, nor from “Apres moi, le deluge”.Joepickett wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:02 am 1A had me trying to find two French words in each theme answer.
I had SAL (salle) and EEL (ile) to start. Which is Room and Island. Then I took SUE (sous) which Under.
Using R, I and U and placing them in R?U?I??? the answer was clearly REUNIONS. (College grads... People of letters)
I was bound and determined and stuck in that rabbit hole for awhile before I gave up trying to find other French words. I tried to turn GOT into Quatre (FOUR) but the F didn't fit my pattern. That is how desparate I was.
- ship4u
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I thought that everyone would see the absurdity of my statement and see it as a joke. And, I always thought that one could put a smiling emoji following a joke in order to help clarify, "yes, I was joking." I never thought to use a smiley face in a passive aggressive way. Lesson learned and I was shocked to see the reaction. I hope that I am not required to change my muggle name to Personae Non Gratae.DrTom wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 10:41 pmship4u wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 7:17 pmDrTom wrote: Sun Nov 07, 2021 7:14 pm
If I took your jest seriously I certainly apologize but this week there has been more than one post disdaining nudges. I also learned a long time ago that putting a smiley face on a potentially negative e-mail statement (whether it is meant that way or not) does NOT make it lighthearted.
If I say - "if only Mr. Gaffney would stop hiding under bridges and scaring Billy goats"- that might be funny
If I say - "If only Mr. Gaffney would stop trying to show his dominance over us by making impossible METAs"- that is not (oh, and PLEASE, I do not for one minute believe Mr. Gaffney is doing that, I am certainly if he did want to NONE of us would ever solve what would be the cleverest meta EVER!!!)
Last edited by ship4u on Mon Nov 08, 2021 7:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
Don & Cynthia
We are always happy to get to know other muggles and help in any way! PM's are always welcome. The next best thing to winning a mug is helping a fellow muggle win a mug!
We are always happy to get to know other muggles and help in any way! PM's are always welcome. The next best thing to winning a mug is helping a fellow muggle win a mug!
- mheberlingx100
- Posts: 614
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I don’t think the French eau and aux really sound exactly like the American letter O. But it’s close enough to get the drift.
- Bird Lives
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Yes, but once I'd gotten to that point, it was obvious what the letter had to be, and strict pronunciation seemed like a nit too small to pick given the magnitude of the mechanism.woozy wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 12:13 am My only complaint is that "OUR" is NOT pronounced as "R". It just isn't.
Last edited by Bird Lives on Mon Nov 08, 2021 8:50 am, edited 1 time in total.
Jay
- Colin
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- Joined: Sat Apr 13, 2019 11:57 pm
Me too! Still can’t believe the blatant use of a decoy in the clue to 1A. Seemed like it had to indicate the first step of the meta and was excited to brush off my high-school French - to no avail. Tipping my hat to all who solved this sans aide!mheberlingx100 wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:28 amI also went at the French rabbit hole with pick and shovel. I tried listing all the three letter French words I could find in the grid to no avail. I thought the lower right “surrey” might be “sur riz” (on rice) or “sur ris” (on and laugh) which of course was nonsense. I also spent some time on Louis XIV (le roi soleil) trying to make SAL ATE into “soleil”. Nothing there, nor from “Apres moi, le deluge”.Joepickett wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:02 am 1A had me trying to find two French words in each theme answer.
I had SAL (salle) and EEL (ile) to start. Which is Room and Island. Then I took SUE (sous) which Under.
Using R, I and U and placing them in R?U?I??? the answer was clearly REUNIONS. (College grads... People of letters)
I was bound and determined and stuck in that rabbit hole for awhile before I gave up trying to find other French words. I tried to turn GOT into Quatre (FOUR) but the F didn't fit my pattern. That is how desparate I was.
One world. One planet. One future.
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I'd bet a plurality of muggles pronounce my home state as "FLAW-rid-a", so I was willing to concede OUR = "R".
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- Location: Chesapeake, VA
Here’s how got there: The puzzle’s title told me straight off that words would either appear, or need to be arranged, in 3x3 boxes. Imagine my surprise that instead of long answers of three shorter words that could be stacked in a 3x3 box, there were four in each! As another Muggle pointed out, many of those shorter words had low-density letters at their start or end, like X or G, and it dawned on me they could be arranged in a 3x3 grid with a donut hole in the middle (there is only one way to do this for each set). Now what? Back to the hint at One Across, I needed to look for three-letter French words created by filling the “donut holes” (As a German-Czech speaker, I don’t parlay voo tray byen) The one that jumped out was “eau”, which even I knew was pronounced “oh!” and it dawned that each donut hole had to be filled with a letter that created two words that sounded like letters and corresponded to the order suggested in the brackets. The grid normally takes me about 15 minutes, so all told it was about an hour and I submitted just after 5 pm.
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- Location: Fairfax County, Virginia
I thought this would be a good clue, if we were allowed to give clues:


- JJD
- Posts: 143
- Joined: Fri Apr 19, 2019 9:13 am
Wow. Just wow. I never know how you all figure out which rabbit hole is right. I spent an hour trying to find the right combination of 3 grid entries to subtract from the theme answers, never knowing if if should be combining all 4 answers or something.
- RDaleHall
- Posts: 279
- Joined: Mon Oct 14, 2019 9:52 pm
Well... was strongly in Isaac's camp on this one even after giving a good effort; don't think I would have gravitated to the boxing that produced the answer.
Did look at other "letters" and 3x3 items: Thought at first that the box of ADD - HEE - URR box was a start towards "ADHERE" and some other path.
A lot of other three letter pairs, even in French, that ran me down my rabbit hole. I thought for sure the 3 letter French words would be "EST" and "DIT" which pronounce as "A" and "D" in French. And then the grid also has herrings like "ARR", "YOU", "BEE". and "VIS".
Congrats to solvers. This was a high star puzzle worthy of the initial Gaffney Gulp.
Did look at other "letters" and 3x3 items: Thought at first that the box of ADD - HEE - URR box was a start towards "ADHERE" and some other path.
A lot of other three letter pairs, even in French, that ran me down my rabbit hole. I thought for sure the 3 letter French words would be "EST" and "DIT" which pronounce as "A" and "D" in French. And then the grid also has herrings like "ARR", "YOU", "BEE". and "VIS".
Congrats to solvers. This was a high star puzzle worthy of the initial Gaffney Gulp.
- mheberlingx100
- Posts: 614
- Joined: Sun Jul 14, 2019 11:39 am
C’etait tres difficile!. I also poked around the ooh la la rabbit hole given all the la’s.Colin wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:57 amMe too! Still can’t believe the blatant use of a decoy in the clue to 1A. Seemed like it had to indicate the first step of the meta and was excited to brush off my high-school French - to no avail. Tipping my hat to all who solved this sans aide!mheberlingx100 wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:28 amI also went at the French rabbit hole with pick and shovel. I tried listing all the three letter French words I could find in the grid to no avail. I thought the lower right “surrey” might be “sur riz” (on rice) or “sur ris” (on and laugh) which of course was nonsense. I also spent some time on Louis XIV (le roi soleil) trying to make SAL ATE into “soleil”. Nothing there, nor from “Apres moi, le deluge”.Joepickett wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:02 am 1A had me trying to find two French words in each theme answer.
I had SAL (salle) and EEL (ile) to start. Which is Room and Island. Then I took SUE (sous) which Under.
Using R, I and U and placing them in R?U?I??? the answer was clearly REUNIONS. (College grads... People of letters)
I was bound and determined and stuck in that rabbit hole for awhile before I gave up trying to find other French words. I tried to turn GOT into Quatre (FOUR) but the F didn't fit my pattern. That is how desparate I was.
- Gman
- Posts: 403
- Joined: Mon Apr 13, 2020 2:47 pm
- Location: Encinitas CA
Part of what makes the meta so fun, but also frustrating, is that the puzzle masters often use clues that are true (eau and aux were required to get the final answer), but which can make the solver fixate on the wrong thing. I tortured the heck out of my hazy French memories all weekend. I even created a little program to cross reference which letters could fill the center of my 3 by 3 box to make two real French words! It was only in my sleep that I thought, B and T must be part of BOOK TOUR, where I slapped my groggy forehead to look at letters that make the three letter word sound like a single letter (OUR being a debatable choice). Truly amazing how much fixating can make you miss the obvious.
- Joe Ross
- Moderator
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I am going to steal this much sooner than is appropriate and will act as if I coined it. Well-turned!mheberlingx100 wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:28 am I also went at the _______ rabbit hole with pick and shovel.
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𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗻𝗲𝗲𝗱 𝗶𝘀 ENORMOUS 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗰𝗮𝗿𝗲:
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𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗰𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗿 & 𝘁𝗿𝗮𝘂𝗺𝗮. 𝗣𝗟𝗘𝗔𝗦𝗘 𝗦𝗛𝗔𝗥𝗘!
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𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗰𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗿 & 𝘁𝗿𝗮𝘂𝗺𝗮. 𝗣𝗟𝗘𝗔𝗦𝗘 𝗦𝗛𝗔𝗥𝗘!
- TeaJenny
- Posts: 291
- Joined: Fri Feb 05, 2021 11:44 am
- Location: Stamford, CT
I'm rather embarrassed to say that I submitted an educated guess Hail Mary at about 11:40 last night, and it was correct!
I never did figure out the actual mechanism, but instead crossed out duplicate letters in each theme answer and the results kind of looked like BOOK TOUR, if I squinted and ignored the X and Y. The pic is just a small fraction of my scribblings throughout the weekend.
Kudos to everyone who figured it out! This was a doozy.

I never did figure out the actual mechanism, but instead crossed out duplicate letters in each theme answer and the results kind of looked like BOOK TOUR, if I squinted and ignored the X and Y. The pic is just a small fraction of my scribblings throughout the weekend.
Kudos to everyone who figured it out! This was a doozy.
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You can never get a cup of tea large enough or a book long enough to suit me. ~C.S. Lewis
- femullen
- Posts: 542
- Joined: Fri Feb 28, 2020 1:02 pm
- Location: Shenandoah Valley, Virginia
Picked a good week to miss. Another in the Never-Woulda-Got-It folder.
For nudges, feel free to PM me. I won't have a clue how to help you, but you might shove me ashore.
- HeadinHome
- Posts: 1457
- Joined: Sun Apr 26, 2020 9:06 am
- Location: Charlotte, NC
Yes!! and in those cases we were taught to make the pronoun case agree within the clause rather than in the phrase that contains the clause:mntlblok wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 4:42 am And then there're those prepositions which use a "clause" for their objects, just to keep us on our toes. . .![]()
“Give that cash to who/whom?”
A: Give that cash to HIM — so answer = WHOM
BUT when clauses are involved you get:
“Give that cash to [ whoever/whomever needs it most.] “
A: “___ needs it most” (the clause) calls for subject case (as in “HE needs it most.”) So answer = WHOEVER
OR
Give that cash to [ whoever/whomever you choose] “
A: “___ you choose” (the clause) calls for object case (as in “I choose HIM.”) So answer = WHOMEVER
Ain’t grammar fun??
Last edited by HeadinHome on Mon Nov 08, 2021 8:50 am, edited 1 time in total.
The other Wendy. 

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TeaJenny wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 8:11 am I'm rather embarrassed to say that I submitted an educated guess Hail Mary at about 11:40 last night, and it was correct!![]()
I never did figure out the actual mechanism, but instead crossed out duplicate letters in each theme answer and the results kind of looked like BOOK TOUR, if I squinted and ignored the X and Y. The pic is just a small fraction of my scribblings throughout the weekend.
Kudos to everyone who figured it out! This was a doozy.
Looks exactly like mine. Right down to the squint.