I was wondering if any one knew how to swap 2 diagonal edge pieces.
Assume the white squares don't matter.
Image generated on https://ruwix.com/online-rubiks-cube-solver-program/
My friend gave me this riddle. It's in Hebrew, and I had fun solving it. So I want to share:
The red horse jumped.
It killed the man. Blue blood trickled.
The fly flew, and the elephants, trumpeted
Man marched over the rod.
The king wished to concur
But no horses wer...
Solid round the number 1,
A motley few, this road, walked on,
Yes I'm a coward now be gone,
Made of two but I am one!
Submersing ship with unhinged crew,
Twixt 'Of' and 'Gave' another clue,
Never in a shade of blue,
I warn of danger, please don't sue!
L,M,N,O,T,U,V and W are eight members of a family.They belong to three different generations.There are three married couples.They are all sitting around a circular table facing the center but not necessarily in same manner.N and L are children of O.L is not immediate neighbour of his mother.O and...
@Sid I now understand why you were asking about "san". As I answered earlier it's an honorific, what I hadn't thought of at the time (I didn't know you were talking about grid thirty-six) is that san also means three.
In a Certain Code Language:
'Great Ghost goes Germany' is written as FOTF4T
'round she goes crazy' is written as ZEHR
'Canada can create ' is written as CAK3X
'Just not good enough' is written as UOOJ
please anyone share the logic for the Question,How the sentence can be decoded,please anyon...
Wikipedia saith: This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山?, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds.
(the question mark is, in the original, a superscript linking to Wikipedia's help on non-European character sets; if I'd been less lazy I'd have not copied it here; apologies for any confusion :-).)
I was wondering how people are able to simplify Cubing algorithms. Is there a piece of software or something that brute forces possibilities. Or is there an actual method to this?
What comes next in each of these sequences?
$$\begin{array}{align*}\textbf{ 1
}&\text{J, KK, LLL, MZ, A, BO, ?}\\\textbf{ B
}&\text{HNAKXR, EERREA, LOGYND, INOPOO, ?}\\\textbf{ C
}&\text{NMLLARY, JBZALOY, KMMRA, DBJTML, ORMSLBL, ?}\\\textbf{ 4 }&\text{C-N, E-N, NW-S-NE-C, S-SW-W, WSW-SE-N...
a precise definition (acceptable in traditional "quick" crosswords) a fair subsidiary indicator to the same answer (usually involving wordplay) and nothing else
@Matt You can't put arbitrary words between the definition and the wordplay even if they are short, any more than you can insert random words into an ordinary English sentence. Some specific short words are OK, like "is"; maybe sometimes words like "gives" or "yields".
Thankfully I know what you're talking about @Wheatley, for future reference you should use @{user name} to reply (especially after a long time has passed)
@Sid You got the answer right, but I don't see complete reasoning for why B,D,C,I for federer. You may want to add it mentioning it relates to closest :)
@dcfyj Yeah, eventually I googled many words in there before going ahead :D
Did you see the exception I discovered in my answer?
It would be interesting to see how OP handles it :p Let me leave a comment on the question