I got this Loopy (Cairo) puzzle, but got stuck here:
I have no idea how to proceed without guessing with backtracking. Are there any local deductions possible here?
I Hope you are doing well and safe 🥰 .
Are you fan of anime 🤩 ? If yes this puzzle is for you .Let's see how much you know about anime movies.Below images has 5 pictures each picture represent a anime movies . Look at each component inside each picture to get correct movie name .
I know this p...
1. Take 0 out then you are really in it
2. Take 1 out then it is unreal
3. Take 2 out, then you are back to 1
4. Take 3 out, then you are back to 1
5. Take 4 out, then you are back to 0
What word am I?
Just a warning to people not to click on this guy's links - he's started to hide hyperlinks to inappropriate sites beneath the URL text. Always hover before clicking (or just flag immediately without engaging at all...).
I am fond of puzzles related to mathematics, and I am very keen to solve cryptic crosswords. However, The main obstacle is that they seem to require superb linguistics background knowledge/skills. As a non-native English speaker, I might attribute my hampering to the lack of skills any ordinary n...
@Mithical I had no idea what that was a reference to. Googled it, found vimeo.com/87527854 , but I'm guessing there's some older reference that Google isn't showing me.
"Chain of Command" is a two-part episode of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation. It aired as the 10th and 11th episodes of the sixth season, the 136th and 137th episodes of the series.
Set in the 24th century, the series follows the adventures of the Starfleet crew of the Federation starship Enterprise-D. In this episode, Jean-Luc Picard is removed from command of the Enterprise for a covert mission, and his replacement is assigned to deal with the Cardassians openly. The second part of the episode is noted for the intense performance of Patrick Stewart...
@Deusovi ah, thanks. That explains why Googling "there are seven lights" didn't get me much.
@Sphinx When trying Israeli (Hebrew-language) cryptics, I found that there are a two main hindrances: (1) You have to know the language well. Much as your standard, uneducated anglophone who has never done a word puzzle and has no experience with wordplay will not be able to make much progress in an English cryptic crossword, so too will someone on that level of Hebrew, even if he is experienced in cryptics, will not do well in a cryptic crossword. [continued]
[continued] (2) The standards and rules. I know the standards of an American cryptic crossword, less so of a British one, but not of an Israeli one. (But #2 is, I guess, easily surmountable. I can read up on the standards.)
Anyways, the general Ximenean rules are in Deusovi's cryptic clue guide and deviations from that are usually cleverness, mistakes (aka junk), or libertarian cluing
Ximenes was some dude who said stuff like "indirect anagrams bad" and "single letter selection of synonyms no fun"
by obeying those rules in cryptic crossword clues, people who create clues (also known as setters) prevent the clue solvers from becoming super frustrated
because if nobody had fun solving crosswords, then the setters would be out of a job
@PrinceNorthLæraðr depends on your audience - i personally stick with american english homophones because i speak american english, but wouldn't be surprised to see british english homophones from a british constructor
Rhoticity in English is the pronunciation of the historical rhotic consonant /r/ in all contexts by speakers of certain varieties of English. The presence or absence of rhoticity is one of the most prominent distinctions by which varieties of English can be classified. In rhotic varieties, the historical English /r/ sound is preserved in all pronunciation contexts. In non-rhotic varieties, speakers no longer pronounce /r/ in postvocalic environments—that is, when it is immediately after a vowel and not followed by another vowel. For example, in isolation, a rhotic English speaker pronounces the...
in addition, many dictionaries only write pronunciations for one specific dialect (or are at least meant primarily for one specific dialect), because of how varied dialects can be
So it's just that some people say one thing and other people say another and hopefully everybody understands each other and nobody is wrong and everybody should be happy
it's not like british english is completely incomprehensible to an american english speaker, or vice versa
@PrinceNorthLæraðr AC is a common enough abbreviation that you don't need to clue initials there - it's an actual thing, so it works as a direct synonym
"turn on the AC" is a pretty natural thing to say
(and you could also synonymize AC as, say, "cooler")
the thing i'm confused about is the ordering though
even, say, 15-20 years ago, "google" was not a verb
and of course there are things like the cot-caught merger, where (some) american english speakers have a homophone and british speakers don't -- the reverse of the rhoticity thing, in a way
is there a way to find the Median of an unsorted array:
1- without sorting it.
2- without using the select algorithm, nor the median of medians
I found a lot of other questions similar to mine. But the solutions, most of them, if not all of them, discussed the SelectProblem and the MedianOfMedians