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00:00 - 01:0001:00 - 13:00

01:00
5 also dies - it was INTOLERABLE
ahh, I know of flights of Valkyries and Concords, but not Intruders
ohhhh
man. good clue
Bumblebee, too.
which one?
Acts. I was wracking my brain on that one
01:00
oh, yeah, Bumblebees, right
wow, 8 was awful :-)
1: You can receive it and you can show it
sorry, was 5 "Acts"? If so, would someone cleverer than me like to explain how it yields INTOLERABLE? If not, (1) what was 5 and (2) did anyone actually explain "Acts"? Apologies for being incredibly dim.
hm actually
01:03
@Rubio is your 1 INTEREST?
The Intolerable Acts were the American Patriots' term for a series of punitive laws passed by the British Parliament in 1774 after the Boston Tea Party. They were meant to punish the Massachusetts colonists for their defiance of throwing a large tea shipment into Boston Harbor in reaction to being taxed by the British. In Great Britain, these laws were referred to as the Coercive Acts. The acts took away Massachusetts' self-government and historic rights, triggering outrage and resistance in the Thirteen Colonies. They were key developments in the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1775. Four...
1: ✔
was going for a regionalism (Britain calls them the Coercive Acts)
@Deusovi oh. OK, I guess.
Dunno if you saw mine NEWTON
01:04
oh. contact on that
@BaldBantha which of your currently-starred clues stand after going from INT to INTE?
2: Setter Sounds like fork
Contact on 1
cut off tail (detail) is intricate, no longer stands
@Glorfindel Newton isn't just INTELLIGENT or INTELLECTUAL, is it?
oh, wait, 1 is done
01:04
@GarethMcCaughan no
1: A nice catch
play is still there
2: Get in the way
cut off tail(de-tail) is "intricate", no longer stands
@Rubio perhaps your 2 is INTERPOSE?
01:06
how is that INTRICATE btw
detailed, intricate
detailED would be INTRICATE
"cut off tail" can yield "detailed" as well as "detail"
oh. yeah, can one more of you now explain for me to make me feel extra dumb? hehe
true, but the explanation was detail
"cut off tail" --> "de-tail(ed)" --> "detail(ed)" --> "intricate"
01:07
2 is not INTERPOSE
@Rubio 2: contact
@Rubio let's see, 2 could also be INTERRUPT
or INTERFERE
It could be, but isn't
Savage
(does that apply to both my suggestions? it arrived awfully soon after I wrote INTERFERE)
01:09
To both, yes
4: Bethrothed
@Sconibulus 4 is INTENDED
That clue looks familiar. hehe
yeah, I think you used it a week or two ago
01:10
@Glorfindel Your Newton clue could be, in honour of the infinitesimal calculus, INTEGRAL or INTEGRATOR.
I spelled it right though. ;)
@GarethMcCaughan Integral, yes
right, there's only one h isn't there
@Rubio your 2 could also, more tenuously, be INTERCEDE or INTERMEDIATE.
3: pl ay
01:11
6: Cause pro
Neither of those, no.
@Rubio Contact
@Rubio is your 3 INTERPLAY?
3, no
or just INTERNAL?
01:12
no
or perhaps INTERPOLATION?
Still no, alas.
ah, maybe INTERMISSION
There it is. ✔
(Deusovi is so much quicker than me sometimes.)
01:13
I still have no idea on Glorfindel's. hehe
@Rubio OK, I'm going to stop guessing INTER... words for your 2 and invite @Sconibulus to tell us what he thinks it is.
U Chicago
my guess was Intervene
01:14
that's the one. ✔
just out of curiosity, was your guess INTERVENE before I guessed all those other things that turned out to be wrong?
anyway
Gareth defending: I N T E R
1 stands.
So does 6.
Kim jung still stands, cat goes does not
It actually was, although I'd also thought of your first guess, Interpose
01:15
Mine busted
2: Like Contact, sometimes
Contact
cat goes: purr, pose for the picture: purpose; intent
@BaldBantha Blimey.
Wow.
01:16
Nice...
3: Intruder
@Sconibulus Does your mysterious "Setter ..." one stand?
It does
is "play" still alive?
@Rubio I think Glorfindel said it was busted but didn't say what it was
01:17
Oh you said it busted. yeah I'm curious now
Final call for flight 420 to Boulder, Colorado
Contact?
Play? Same as yours @Rubio
@Rubio I guess your 3 is INTERLOPER
@Glorfindel which was.....? please be un-ambiguos
01:18
INTERLOPER ✔
Interlude, Rubio had the same clue earlier
I... didn't have that clue
@Glorfindel Rubio's was intermission not interlude
and it wouldn't have been busted
and it had a (deliberate) space in the middle
01:19
Pl ay
ohhhh. that was kinda vauge either way fine with the space in the middle
@Rubio your 2 might be INTERESTING or (with a different sense of "contact") perhaps INTERCOURSE.
Neither
@Rubio or for that matter it might be INTERNATIONAL or INTERMINABLE, both of which arguably describe the present game
INTERMINABLE ✔
01:21
7: McConaughey vehicle
welcome.
small being; o; photon
@BaldBantha your "Final call..." might be INTERCOM or INTERNATIONAL or INTERSTATE though I suspect it is none of those.
3: /usr/bin/perl
@Rubio your 3 is probably INTERPRETER.
01:22
Indeed. ✔
contact on 7
I really hope that's an actual motor vehicle
I assume 7 is a movie or something and I know essentially nothing about movies. I'll pass on that one.
7: Interstellar
ah, should have guessed that I suppose
01:24
Yes
@GarethMcCaughan intercom is correct
ah, splendid
I threw in the 420 and Colorado to trip some people up
Absolutely nothing to do with it
yeah, I was wondering whether it would turn out to be about weed
anyway
Gareth defending: I N T E R C
It has rabbit ears, two-spots, and worms
01:25
1 stands
What's dead?
Kim jung un does not stand, it was "Interview" as in the movie
2 is dead, was Intersection
6 died - it was INTER (cause pro[blem] --> inter[fere])
Oh duh
01:25
@BaldBantha care to explain the korean one?
It's a movie
Mine busts, imp; o; lite (light) --> interrupt
ohhh
@Glorfindel Just out of curiosity, has anyone in any game of Contact ever guessed one of those "free associate bits, put 'em together and make another word related to the result" clues? :-)
Well...
01:27
Seems a level of indirection too far to me hehe
Yeah, agreed
8: synonymous
Contact
@Sconibulus I'm feeling super-dumb; could you explain the "setter" one?
@Silenus perhaps your 8 is INTERCHANGEABLE?
@Silenus contact....?
01:28
Yes, INTERCHANGEABLE.
sounds like Set Or, and a fork in the road is the Def
how does "intersection" sound like "set or" or indeed like "setter"?
I mean, I guess it's got a couple of the same sounds in it...
"setter" sounds like "set or"
@Rubio Is your nice catch INTERCEPTION or INTERCEPT?
and the set-theoretic equivalent of logical or is intersection
except... it's AND, not or
but it isn't
or would be union
...you are absolutely right
01:29
2: Some ballistic thingies are
and I am a dumb dumb
INTERCEPTION ✔
@Rubio 2 INTERCONTINENTAL
2: ✔
lawyer
01:31
@Glorfindel could your lawyer perhaps be an INTERCESSOR (or INTERCEDER) since s/he pleads someone's case?
@GarethMcCaughan yep
1: Joined
this is getting ... tougher
@Rubio 1 is probably INTERCONNECTED
Aye ✔
3: One of two things to do in a rural winter
01:33
@Sconibulus contact
What's the other one I wonder
@Sconibulus I wonder whether there's some slightly crude saying that makes this INTERCOURSE (though if so, that probably isn't the word in the slightly crude saying)
drink?
@GarethMcCaughan In fact there is :)
yep
I suspect the other thing to do is "freeze"
since it would start with the same letter
01:34
hah
I'd've clued it with "one of the four Fs of--
yeah that
Intoxication and Intercourse
lol.
hmm
@Sconibulus oh, wow, you mean it actually is "intercourse" in the original? Or are there more usual words for those things that pair equally well?
01:35
1: in the membrane
It was in one of the places I heard it
actually nvm that was completely wrong
@Rubio Perhaps INTERCELLULAR, though I'm not sure the meaning is right if so
but yes that was the word ✔
which may have been Mystery, Alaska; but I'm not positive
01:36
I love American place names almost as much as English ones.
(e.g., newspaper headline "Fertile woman dies in Climax"; Fertile and Climax are both names of towns somewhere in the rural US)
Pfff.
but I'm not sure the US has anything to compare with the glories of Chipping Sodbury and Burnt Norton and so forth.
I'm pretty sure half of the town names in the rural US were picked by throwing a dart at a dictionary.
I mean, there's always Hell, Michigan.
01:38
I wonder whether that derives from the German
And then misspelling it @Deusovi
(updated my clue)
5: Aircraft Classification
Dunno if the German makes anymore sense @GarethMcCaughan
01:39
(true story I heard only recently: the German word "hell", meaning bright, can be used to describe light-coloured beers. So someone from near the Austrian town of Fucking brought out a new pale lager...)
@Rubio This is hilarious.
@Glorfindel well, "hell" in German means "bright", which isn't such a bad thing to call a place.
I haven't followed the YouTube link, but if it's what I think it is you should check out the maker's others.
Right, it's just that He'll is a noun and might make more sense as a place name
There is one about a keyboard instrument that is especially amusing.
Yeah, someone linked that one earlier, I found this one through that
01:41
(I think it was Rand who posted that one.)
Sorry for sidetracking hehe
Sidetracking is fine since it currently looks as if no one can figure out anyone else's words :-).
hm
1: The Traveling Salesman problem has its subject traveling thusly
@Sconibulus Perhaps there is a kind of aircraft called an INTERCEPTOR? Or perhaps they're classified by range and some are INTERCONTINENTAL?
@Rubio probably INTERCITY
yar
01:43
@GarethMcCaughan yeah, Interceptors are a type
@Deusovi oh, of course your rabbit-ear one is INTERCAL
I didn't understand that one
a fine and inexplicably underused language
01:44
an esolang (esoteric programming language)
Ahh
its name stands for "Compiler language with no pronounceable acronym"
Obviously.
Oh. Well, of course it does.
3: The Traveling Salesman problem has its subject traversing this
01:45
Its fundamental arithmetic operators are things like "interleave the bits of these numbers"
and its main control-flow primitive is called COME FROM
...I think you just explical'd quite well
also, if you're not polite enough, the program will refuse to run
or if you're too polite, in fact
(some smart-alec realised that by having multiple lines COME FROM the same place you automatically get a language with support for a curious sort of parallelism)
and yes, as D. says, you have to preface a certain fraction of lines with PLEASE.,
how fun
@Sconibulus I don't suppose yours like Rubio's similar earlier clue is INTERCITY, referring now to a network of roads or railways? If not, it might be INTERCONNECTIONS meaning the edges in the graph the salesman is moving on.
01:47
4: Type of basketball played by the Blue Devils.
it has helpful error messages like "COMMUNIST PLOT DETECTED, COMPILER IS SUICIDING", "PROGRAM HAS GOTTEN LOST", and "RANDOM COMPILER BUG"
@Silenus is your 4 perhaps INTERCOLLEGIATE?
Yes.
(not that I have ever heard of the Blue Devils)
@GarethMcCaughan Interconnected graph, but yeah, close enough
01:47
(you have to use a compiler flag to stop that last one from happening at random)
... lol. that's pretty funny
tentative contact on NAIA
1: You might get shivved here
well, I have no useful ideas at all about NAIA so @Sconibulus go for it.
I, uh, think that's how it's spelled
01:49
There's a decent chance it's INTERCOLLEGIATE :)
oh, does one of the As stand for ATHLETIC or something?
probably National Associaction of Intercollegiate Athletics or something
Gareth defending: I N T E R C A
and no, it is not INTERCAL
01:50
Not sure on exact but yes
1 busted, was INTERCOSTAL
Insert
(I mean the answer is not INTERCAL; I am saying nothing, of course, about whether the next letter is L)
@Deusovi I think you have it.
Then let me give a more obvious clue...
OK
(and my apologies if it turns out you didn't have it and I've spoiled your clue)
01:51
Esolang 8
yeah, that's it. INTERCALATE.
I was mildly surprised by how many INTERC words there are that are not INTERCALATE.
but only mildly, and of course the whole point of choosing a word that starts INTER is that the branching factor is large.
Well done @Deusovi!
Neat. I've learnt a word. That's fairly infrequent.
Nice job
I only know that word because of the \intercal(ate) command in LaTeX, which I use for the transpose in my notes because I think it looks nicer
2016 ended with an intercalary second.
01:54
@Deusovi I didn't know about \intercal, or if I did I'd forgotten. Thanks.
anyway, it's now nearly 3am; that was indeed an INTERMINABLE game, for which my apologies in so far as they're appropriate.
so I'm off to bed; have fun!
Night!
See ya
ninight Gareth :)
 
1 hour later…
03:04
the bald bantha returns
 
9 hours later…
12:20
Awh I missed a game :(
00:00 - 01:0001:00 - 13:00

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