silk is produced by insects but it's not promising
Oh hmm I've got an idea... but the "tighter" has to be "looser"
silk is produced by insects, and milk is produced by larger mammals, and that turns the S (small) into M (medium), and if it were the other way round it would be a tighter fit
Or maybe with respect to the M in milk, the S in silk is a tighter fit?
You have an $8\times8$ square grid and a $15\times15$ square grid. You want to dissect them and combine them into a $17\times17$ square. What is the minimum number of pieces required?
Only cuts along grid lines are allowed. All pieces be polyominoes.
This is in the spirit of the What is a Word/Phrase™ series started by JLee with a special brand of Phrase™ and Word™ puzzles.
If a word conforms to a special rule, I call it a Barbecuǝ Phrase™.
Use the following examples below to find the rule.
Barbecuǝ Phrase™
Non-Barbecuǝ Phrase™
Patira...
I do wish people posting what-is-a-X-word/phrase/... puzzles would stop using the very specific and totally ungrammatical wording that most people copy-and-paste at the start of them.
actually, "totally ungrammatical" is wrong; the trouble is with the meaning more than with the grammar. JLee didn't start the series with a special brand of [etc.], JLee started the series with one or more such puzzles, thus forming a special brand, which others continued with.
And to whatever extent it's a "special brand", "in the spirit of" is a really weird way to describe it.
"This puzzle continues the tradition of What is a Word/Phrase puzzles begun by JLee" or "This puzzle is in the spirit of JLee's What is a Word puzzles" or something would do just as well and not make me flinch so hard every time I see the wording :-).
Beatrix places dominoes on a 5x5 board, either horizontally or vertically, so that each domino covers two small squares. She stops when she cannot place another domino, as in the example shown in the diagram.
When Beatrix stops, what is the largest possible number of squares that may still be un...