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Solving => Today's Puzzles => Topic started by: magus on November 08, 2015, 09:23:53 AM
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THEME: short E sound substituted for by A sound in familiar phrases
GOOD ONES:
"Leave tiny bugs alone"? DON’T SWAT THE SMALL THINGS
Moderate building expansion? LIMITED ADDITION
Former "formerly" ERST [oldie but goodie]
Sketch opening ETCH-A- [not comic routine]
Sound of silence? SHH
Introduction to a madam? I'M ADAM [as in "Madam, I'm Adam"]
BTW:
PUT A FATHER IN YOUR CAP took me a second --- it's idiomatic: put someone in = put on someone --- sounds too much like high fashion for this lowlife
Counts' equals EARLS [counts are not English and are not part of the peerage; the clue needs "abroad"]
Word in many music genres METAL [I must be "out of it" since I know of only one: heavy. Can there really be many?]
Bygone blade SNEE [For me, the highlight of this puzzle is that it also gives us SMEE, which seems to damn with faint praise.]
RATING: ;D ;D
Three grins = Loved it; Two grins = Enjoyed it; One grin = A bit bland for my taste; One teardrop = Not much fun
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Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and Blue Cheer were among the earliest heavy metal bands in the late 1960s. Over the years, there have been several sub-genres of heavy metal: death metal, thrash metal, gothic metal, doom metal, power metal, black metal, sludge metal, glam metal, grunge metal, nu metal and a punk/metal hybrid called metalcore.
Do not---I repeat, do not ask me to explain the differences between all those styles. To me, they're all pretty much the same.
And unlistenable. :)
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Thanks for the info. --- fine example of distinctions without differences.
I would bet listeners of the metal sub-genres would not be able to recognize one from the other since metal is a loud, repetitious cacophony. The difference is in the costuming of the groups: goth metal would mean the band dresses in grotesque gothic leather, chains, and piercings. If they changed costumes and played the same (if possible) set, they would be grunge metal dressed like slobs.