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00:53
@msh210 w/ a ll
 
2 hours later…
02:43
@juicifer yes indeed
02:56
CCCC: Recipe for antidote: "use rum for Mulaney's portion" (5 7)
_se rum for Mula_
yep yep
CCCC: He gets high at work, regularly taking pills, in possession of controlled substance (5)
@Jafe heh this is PILOT= _I_L_ in possession of POT
that's right
03:08
Ahh I wondered what would have IL
03:35
CCCC: Chaos can potentially fix the border? (6)
03:58
@Ankoganit mayhem = may (can, potentially) hem (fix the border?)
@oAlt yep!
Once I thought of the can/may comparison it clicked
CCCC: He gets Yale student in tune (6)
04:34
Yale does have a Glee club
05:21
and other musical clubs, plus a music school.
RIGHT, i firgot about Yale School of Music
Incredible conservatory
06:05
@oAlt HELIUM (He) = ELI (Yale student) in HUM (tune)
@TakingNotes Correct!
CCCC: Starts to signal a message on abandoned island (5)
@TakingNotes SAMOA (starts of "signal ... abandoned")
yeah you got it
06:26
samoa isn't the name of an island, though?
maybe i'm missing something obvious
Ah, ig it's technically a nation with two islands
Had no idea before I looked this up just now
dunno whether it would be more or less confusing if one of them was named samoa
like malta, the main island of malta
ah, my samoa knowledge is off then, i thought it was just one island named samoa
CCCC: The Odyssey, for one is beyond my comprehension (5,2,2)
06:50
Theodicy is beyond my comprehension, too.
new word for me, TIL
might try to learn what it means when I have a higher boredom threshold
@Ankoganit Greek tome
@oAlt yep!
CCCC: Only fish and part of foot (4)
@Ankoganit the concurrent existence of a good God and of evil in the world
06:55
@oAlt triple def for SOLE
@Ankoganit it is
@msh210 ah, that's a lot simpler than google's definition made it out to be
CCCC: Sole is difficult to catch (caught 90) (9)
@Ankoganit ELUSIVE (difficult to catch) caught XC (90) = EXCLUSIVE (sole)
@TakingNotes correct!
07:10
CCCC: Fifty-one sole (4)
@TakingNotes L+ONE
@TakingNotes L on– never mind
yeah you got it :)
rip oalt
Lol
sorry not sorry
:p
07:18
0
Q: Where will the ants position themselves so that they are precisely twice as far from vinegar as they are from peanut butter?

Hemant AgarwalAn ant will always position itself so that it’s precisely twice as far from vinegar as from peanut butter. If we put a dab of vinegar at A and a dab of peanut butter at B and we release a troop of ants, what formation will they take up? Note: an ant won't position itself on top of another ant. So...

CCCC: Sole taker of risk: I repaint strange fractal pattern (10,8)
edited to fix wrong count
@Sphinx the underlying geometry problem is fairly standard and well-known, but by no means easy or routine. Not sure if that makes it a math textbook problem...
@Ankoganit SINGLE taking riskirepaint* = Sierpinski triangle
@Ankoganit single[,] taker of (risk I repaint)* = Si(erpinsiki never mind
16 mins ago, by Ankoganit
sorry not sorry
@msh210 indeed
07:29
Hahahah
@msh210 hehe
08:18
CCCC: Plantar surface makes contact with Earth; no need at first to wear cowboy boot for a street in Liverpool (5)
 
1 hour later…
09:32
I currently have an agriculture assignment where you have to construct a model of an agricultural product. I've decided on a bee hive, and I think I'm going along well. The main problem I have currently is making the comb frames inside the hive, and making it look like having honey or brood. I've thought of using cardboard, and engraving hexagons in, but I don't feel like it would be able to produce the look of brood and honey. Are there any ideas/suggestions I could try to replicate the comb?
2
I've looked online, and all the results are kid crafts with large hexagons. I'm trying to replicate the combs to be as realistic as possible.
09:58
@oAlt yep! (I was thinking of E_, but either way works.)
CCCC: Aging, I faked chewing 5 Gum (7)
10:16
@oAlt gingi(V)a*
@msh210 that's right
is "faked chewing" an anagram indicator?
"faked", I think
Here's an easy one, but it lets me combine a couple of previous ideas…
what's the "chewing" for, then?
CCCC: Chant "soles, organs, nerves, gums, heads" (4)
@RyanM I think it's meant to indicate that the V (5) is included within the faked agingi
10:19
@msh210 song
i.e. it means "containing"
@RyanM how do you get that?
ahhhhh. Okay, that makes it make sense
@msh210 s_ o_ n_ g_
@RyanM yes indeed!
(is that the right notation?)
I dunno if there's any "right" notation, but that's one that people commonly use here.
10:23
@msh210 it's not the best but that's indeed what I intended
CCCC: Weird verbal market (6)
@RyanM bazaar ("bizarre")
nice clue
@msh210 Indeed!
Thanks :)
I was trying to make it a little trickier by picking a 6-letter homophone indicator, so that it would look like "weird" was an anagram indicator.
Reminds me of that science cartoon where plutonium is sold in a bazaar.
CCCC: Here you'll need to show me Ms. Harris's way of doing things (2)
10:35
...2, huh...
Assuming I counted correctly. Never a safe assumption.
This seems like as good a time as any to ask: are cryptic answers always written in the Latin alphabet?
@RyanM Yes, but this chatroom has tried a few foreign language clues before
I think doing CCCC in a non-Latin script would render unfair.
MO (way of doing things), as from Mo Harris?
10:43
It surely must be
but also, that doesn't explain quite all the words in the clue :-p
@RyanM indeed not
11:05
Arguably this one didn't use only the Latin alphabet:
Aug 5 at 6:13, by Prince North Læraðr
CCCC: Notified around something like a sharp hit (7)
Oh right
And this one does use the Latin alphabet, but as a transliteration:
Dec 30, 2023 at 16:40, by Jafe
CCCC: Awesome deep-voiced singer covering The Aye of the Taiga? (6)
@msh210 technically, the answer is in the Latin alphabet, even if the process of getting there took a brief step outside of it
@RyanM true
And then there's this one — but you shouldn't take it as a good example of a clue!
Yeah those two were the main foreign language clues I was thinking of
11:16
0
Q: Enigmatic Puzzle 5: Reflections

Stephen SParticularly looking for feedback on this new enigmatic puzzle. I like the concept of it, but have gotten some comments that it might be too difficult without any hints. Let me know what you think. Happy to share hints as needed. Reflections Each time I saw it, I took one more look. VMRTNZ OA...

@msh210 I am not sure I quite follow the answer to that one...
Awesome = badass; deep-voiced singer = bass; covering = containing (like a pillowcase covers a pillow); The Aye of the Taiga = да ("aye" in the taiga in Russia)
and "да" transliterates to "da", I assume?
I visually transliterated to "baaaass", partly based on how "taiga" is pronounced, then looked up how "taiga" was spelled in Russian and found "тайга́" (which does not seem to contain "д"), and then...was confused, and decided I actually had no idea :-p
@RyanM yeah
I assume there's ... some other spelling? Or Wikipedia is wrong?
11:28
Noun: да • (da)
  1. vein, sinew
um… ignore the chat preview and click through instead :-)
ohhhhh
I was overly fixated on the fact that "taiga" has an "aye" in it...
thanks for setting me straight :)
that's why they call me the conversion therapist
um, I mean, no problem
11:44
lol...
11:58
It's so hard to see "mo" not being the answer though, as "way of doing things" is already a standard definition for MO...
Missouri (postal code MO) is known as the "Show Me State", but i still don't quite see how the 'here you'll need to' part factors in
oh the origin of that name is a MO congressman saying "I'm from Missouri, and you have got to show me."
surely that's it
there you go
(and many Missourians since that time have indicated that that's the state where you need to 'show me')
12:13
Ahh, MO = Missouri = Here you'll need to show me
For some reason that took a while to click. Nice find by the way
who should take it? i only really got the last bit because i had MO from dannyu
I'd think @TakingNotes but shrug
alright then
CCCC: Ruder, brasher Arab hiding in three lines of a tongue twister (8, 12)
12:47
This is the ruder, brasher Arab named Eelineso Fatonguetwis.
No need to Google, it's surely correct.
13:01
reading known english tongue twisters because surely it's relevant
"If you're keen on stunning kites and cunning stunts,
buy a cunning stunning stunt kite."
someone had fun with that one
My favorite is "One smart fellow – he felt smart. Two smart fellows – they felt smart. Three smart fellows – they all felt smart."
heheh
 
1 hour later…
14:08
tropical thunderstorm is 8,12 and might be clued by "twister"… if there were such a thing as a tropical thunderstorm
Is there even an anagram indicator here? "Hiding" doesn't seem to be a good one in this case
Ruder or brasher or twister could be, arguably.
Three lines of A are /, \, and -.
@RyanM it's interesting that you appear as a moderator here. SO has its own chat server, and (I just checked) I don't appear as a moderator there.
14:37
1
Q: Fitting the 9th piece into the pizza box

Dmitry KamenetskyI bought two pizzas that were radially sliced into 8 pieces each. I ate 7 of the 16 pieces. Now to save space I want to place the remaining 9 pieces into one box without cutting them and without any overlap. Is this possible? For the sake of the puzzle, assume that pizzas are perfect unit circles...

15:05
"Landseer Newfoundland" sounds like a tongue twister, but that's it
It's not even objectively one, I just messed up the first time I said it
15:20
@oAlt Tiraspol Transnistria
15:36
0
Q: Joined Progression (all possible ones)

Prim3numbahComplete the last grid and tell me a suitable two-word phrase which answers the question below.

15:56
1
Q: Just got a new job... huh?

PolygonPotpourri(This is just a story, not actually real... obviously.) My name is Parangel. I recently got a new job at the office of Pazlo. I was stoked to see what that job was, but to my dismay, it was ordering files in a file cabinet. Ah well. They said every job here would be great, so I guess I should be ...


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