Forum > Today's Puzzles
Sun., 8/31 Pancho Harrison
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magus:
THEME: photography terms adding a second meaning to common phrases
GOOD ONES:
The IndyCar photographer used___ ZOOM LENSES
The stressed out photographer___ FINALLY SNAPPED
The fashion photographer worried about___ MODEL BEHAVIOR
Play area STAGE [I thought kids]
Cab in a bottle, say RED [I thought along the lines of a ship in a bottle, but with the surge in wine drinking of late, CAB is hip for cabernet]
Farm workers ANTS [in an ant farm]
BTW:
Schnauzer of fiction ASTA [wrong! It was a wire-hair fox terrier --- don't think this will go unreported to the AKC]
Slip by ELAPSE [in a way, but ELAPSE does not suggest anything but passage of time while "Slip by" suggests a loss]
Dole out ALLOCATE [same problem. ALLOCATE suggests a particular distribution while "Dole out" means to give in small portions and suggests randomness]
Foreign "gimme's" which I don't: OTRO, sei, A MOI
RATING: ;D ;D ;D
Three grins = Loved it; Two grins = Enjoyed it; One grin = A bit bland for my taste; One teardrop = Not much fun
Thomps2525:
I'm seeing way too many foreign words in puzzles: ETE, ESTA, OTRO, AGUA, MER, ALOHA, TETE, ENERO, OJO, OSO and mnay others. Aren't there enough words in the English language to meet the needs of puzzle makers?
The puzzle by Merl Reagle in today's Los Angeles Times includes OTOO. The clue is "Scoreless tie." I object to this answer for two reasons. First, when a soccer game, baseball game or hockey game is in progress and nobody has made a goal or scored a run, the game is not scoreless. Zero to zero is the score. Second, I consider it sloppy to use a zero to represent the letter O.....or vice-versa. Most people, when giving an address or phone number with a zero in it, will say O instead of zero. O is a letter and zero is a number. In other words, Merl, a score can not be O to O!
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