Re: "Just Look at Yourself" - January 28, 2022
Posted: Mon Jan 31, 2022 2:27 pm
"IOTAS" is my usual start. twice this week it was all gray, though. or was it grey? i can't remember.
A place to discuss the WSJ Weekly Crossword Contest and other "meta"-style crosswords
https://www.xword-muggles.com/
"IOTAS" is my usual start. twice this week it was all gray, though. or was it grey? i can't remember.
Funny...because I shared Tubthumping with the person who was giving me nudges and she didn't realize that was the name of the song. I was having a whiskey drink, not a cider drink, nor a lager drink. I couldn't sing songs that reminded me of the good times because the darn meta just wouldn't come to me.MikeM000 wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 11:22 amThe "3-" on that clue was useful for me when I deciphered what it meant, as my initial thought was "Hair". Although after the excitement wore off I realized that phrase is usually only said in the opposite construction ("splitting hairs").Bird Lives wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 5:32 am
The number in parentheses is the number of letters in the synonym for the hyphenated phrase.
So 39A 3-________ (4 letters) is the 3-letter body part EAR; the word to be entered in the grid (SPLITTING) completes the adjective. The synonym (at 61D) is LOUD, which is four letters.
Also...
I GET KNOCKED DOWN!
BUT I GET UP AGAIN!
NOTHING'S EVER GONNA KEEP ME DOWN!
I rather enjoyed being the recipient of this side-eyeAl Sisti wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 11:54 amYeah, I always liked that word. As for navel-gazing, I guess I was absent that day/era/location where it was taught. I thought the same thing for another of Matt's puzzles where the answer was "Side eye." I had never heard of that either. I guess that entries like NENE, ADIT and ETUI are -- thankfully -- giving way to a new day.woozy wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 11:47 am
If there's an age divide among people who have and have not heard of navel-gazing it is definitely that the young are less likely to have heard of it. I'm a bit surprised that you are familiar with the word "omphaloskepsis". Most people hearing that for the first time ask what it means and are told it means navel gazing.
Yeah, I agree they don't always break the game, but if you get one early enough to play it first in the grasslands... look out! My group took out the ravens and also the killdeer and Franklin's Gull (2 cards for one egg) because if someone got them in their opening hand it felt like they had a huge advantage. I understand the expansions mitigated the situation, but I haven't played those.woozy wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 5:44 am She gets *really* annoyed when I draw the ravens. But she likes it when she draws the ravens. But she's gets annoyed when the ravens come late in the game or are forced to be discarded in predation.
But we both like the ravens too much when we get them to take them out. And they don't *always* break the game. But dang... put the Chihuahan Raven in your grasslands and... just lay eggs and you *never* have to worry about getting the right food for your birds again! (Nothing worse than wanting certain foods but not having them show up in the bird feeder. Which is interesting. We came across a situation tonight, that in hindsight is surprising we didn't run across earlier. She had bird with a "take a worm from the birdfeeder" action in her forest so every time she took food she *always* remove all the worms and as half my cards needed worms I *never* got them)
But we hate many of the bonus cards. The backyard naturalist encourages you to play low cards... that's a winning strategy for sure. And the one where you have groups of four eggs for a measely 1 point each. Yeah like you can ever have more then two or three of those. If you have the european expansion then what about Tucked cards bonus card? It takes 4 different birds with tucked cards to get started and 7 to get the high score. It's a good game when we get three different birds with tucked cards.
I don't understand the love for words with lots of vowels as the first guess. It doesn't narrow much down and every guess is going to have a vowel in it, so they'll come out eventually. My favorite starters are SNORT, SHUNT, STERN, SNARL, SHIRT, etc. I think having the 1st 'S' and the last 'T' are particularly strong.vandono wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 2:27 pm"IOTAS" is my usual start. twice this week it was all gray, though. or was it grey? i can't remember.
A slew of Wordle linguists online, of course. Real linguists. One suggested SOARE (a young hawk) because it has frequent letters in their common places. Today? Zilch!ZooAnimalsOnWheels wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 4:11 pmI don't understand the love for words with lots of vowels as the first guess. It doesn't narrow much down and every guess is going to have a vowel in it, so they'll come out eventually. My favorite starters are SNORT, SHUNT, STERN, SNARL, SHIRT, etc. I think having the 1st 'S' and the last 'T' are particularly strong.
I understand it but I think the logic is faulty. Finding which vowels are in it will happen in your first three guesses any way. So you should concentrate and the difficult things to track down/eliminate first.ZooAnimalsOnWheels wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 4:11 pm
I don't understand the love for words with lots of vowels as the first guess.
How about some snowman gazing that I made for my love?MaineMarge wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 4:58 pm Enough with all this navel gazing, Muggles. Let’s do some flower gazing.
With creative gardening you can combine the two.... ew.....MaineMarge wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 4:58 pm
Enough with all this navel gazing, Muggles. Let’s do some flower gazing-
sheesh, what do you have against navel orange blossoms‽woozy wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 5:39 pmWith creative gardening you can combine the two.... ew.....MaineMarge wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 4:58 pm
Enough with all this navel gazing, Muggles. Let’s do some flower gazing-
And then there is Post #5 in the Wordle thread.CPJohnson wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 6:15 pm I understand that there are 2 Wordle camps: First-Word-Vowel-Heavy and First-Word-Consonant-Heavy.
Whenever a bunch of people post "I can't submit my answer using the online submission form!" it's a clue that there's some kind of punctuation in the answer.BarbaraK wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 10:26 amPicking winning entries is random, but deciding if the chosen one does indeed have the correct answer is done by a human. So, yes, any recognizable punctuation and spelling should be fine. In fact, the online entry mechanism usually doesn't allow punctuation, so people who submitted that way may not even have been able to use the hyphen.Carter wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 9:50 am I submitted NAVELGAZING and the WSJ answer is NAVEL-GAZING. Would my answer be accepted as correct without the dash?
Free "initially, they say. Translation: not for very long. Monetize. Monetize..Nlobb wrote: Mon Jan 31, 2022 6:30 pm I see the New York Times has purchased Wordle for an undisclosed amount in the low 7 figures. Hope it will still be accessible and free to play!!
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