Relative difficulty: Medium (16 mins)
THEME: A/I — Throughout, there are words that can have either an A or an I in a certain slot. These words get two clues. I've arranged them in "grid" order as opposed to going by the numbers of the clues.
Theme answers:
Word of the Day: PART IV (Surprise element in the "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" trilogy) —
Hey solving friends! Today is another Malaika MWednesday. Solving music: I've been listening to the cover of Push that Ryan Gosling sings (as Ken) in Barbie. I can't stop listening. I've heard it probably eight times today. [Edit: I listened to it another four times while writing this post.]
- [What to compile before travel] for PACKING LIST or [A "choice" that's not really a choice] for PICKING LAST
- [Fallen angel] for SATAN or [Luxurious fabric] for SATIN
- [Underlying] for BASAL or [Salad herb] for BASIL
- [Lip cover] for CHAPSTICK or [Bettor's pile] for CHIP STACK
- [Story] for TALE or [Mosaic piece] for TILE
- [Tickle pink] for ELATE or [Top notch] for ELITE
- [Sensational scoring feats] for HAT TRICKS or [Sensational songs] for HIT TRACKS
- [Walks fancily] for PRANCES or [Some rulers] for PRINCES
- [Green land] for LEA or [Garland] for LEI
- [Dynamos] for BALLS OF FIRE or [Menus] for BILLS OF FARE
- [Boats] for ARKS or [Bothers] for IRKS
- [Stuffs] for SATES or [Spots] for SITES
The longer theme answers (which I put in blue) have a certain cadence to them-- Each answer contains one A and one I, and they swap places. Basically, they're fun to say. I think this makes me more forgiving about the fact that BILLS OF FARE and CHIP STACK seem a little clunky.
I solved this on my computer, and the "or" wasn't handled super well... In some places it looked fine, but in other places, the words got kinda squished.
Word of the Day: PART IV (Surprise element in the "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" trilogy) —
The novels are described as "a trilogy in five parts", having been described as a trilogy on the release of the third book, and then a "trilogy in four parts" on the release of the fourth book. The US edition of the fifth book was originally released with the legend "The fifth book in the increasingly inaccurately named Hitchhiker's Trilogy" on the cover. Subsequent re-releases of the other novels bore the legend "The [first, second, third, fourth] book in the increasingly inaccurately named Hitchhiker's Trilogy". In addition, the blurb on the fifth book describes it as "the book that gives a whole new meaning to the word 'trilogy'". [Wiki]
• • •
I got the gimmick for today's puzzle pretty early on-- when I hit 2-down about three minutes in, I thought "Well does it want SATAN or does it want SATIN.... or does it want both?" The fact that the longer answers were arranged symmetrically also helped. And the clues kind of spelled things out. I suspect some people will grumble that this should have run on Thursday, but I think it was too easy for a Thursday.
Lucifer Morningstar pls open a nightclub in NYC but do not help the NYPD solve cases they do not need your help babe |
My main issue here is why. Why did we do all that? What was it all for? When I do a themed crossword, I'm okay if a weird thing is happening (I like it when a weird thing happens!), but I want to know why it's happening! And "Because it's cool" is not going to cut it for me.
The puzzle reminded me of one from David Steinberg. There, we also had words that became new words if we changed two letters, but we had a fun visual revealer for why-- both ends of the entries were splitting into two, hence SPLIT ENDS. Here, I was waiting for a revealer (I wondered if it would be something to do with artificial intelligence), and when I did not get one, it crushed any sense of "that's cool" that I had felt while solving.
By the way, this is a pretty common complaint from me. The Times has made it clear that "Because it's cool" (or "Because we like puns" or even "Because it seemed like an impossible thing to make but the constructor was able to make it") is a totally fine reason for them, but I'll be grumpy every time. "Give me my revealer!" I demand, pounding my fists on the table like a baby at a restaurant who has had their first taste of French Fry and needs another.
Oh, and I got Natick-ed! I think I'm using that correctly. I am unfamiliar with mining towns in Nevada (or any town that is not Las Vegas or Reno, if I'm being honest) so ELY meant nothing to me. And CODICIL appears to be Latin. (And hence, was less infer-able than an English word. I did not expect that L!)
This is Ely, apparently |
Bullets:
- [Band aids] for AMPS — This is one of a couple misdirect-y clues that are tried-and-true and appear every now and then. (Others include [First lady?] for EVE and [Fashion line?] for SEAM.) Some people get frustrated by the repeats, but every puzzle is someone's first puzzle, and these clues are cute as hell the first time you see them.
- [Central Plains nation] for PAWNEE — I would have clued this as the delightfully bonkers town in Parks & Rec, but I also get complaints that my puzzles have too much trivia and pop culture in them. (Sorry, sorry!! I'm supposed to do that for my Vulture puzzles, and it's a hard habit to turn off.)
- ["This Is Just to Say" by William Carlos Williams, essentially] for APOLOGY — Once I referenced this poem as one I don't like in a conversation at a party. Party Guest #2 was shocked, and after a little friendly arguing, Party Guest #3 revealed he didn't know the poem. Party Guest #2 then recited it from memory, and Party Guest #3 said "....that's it?"
- [Fa-la connection] for SOL — I've seen this in a few puzzles and am baffled each time. As far as I can tell, the note is "so" not SOL. In the song (You Know Which Song), Julie Andrews uses the word "sew" and even on Wikipedia, the note is called "so." I don't know why the NYT insists that it's SOL but presumably one of you will let me know in the comments.
P.S. Tomato update, for all my Tomato Heads-- I believe I had my penultimate harvest of the season. Both of my cherry tomato plants (Super Sweet 100 and Matt's Wild Cherry) have basically ceased producing, and my Early Girl has maybe five green fruits that may or may not ripen based on the weather the next few days.
Me too wondering about so/sol.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the theme as I did the puzzle. Had not a thought about wanting a reveal.
Do-re-mi-fa-sol-la-ti-do (musical scale)
DeleteYes, do re mi etc is called solfege and indeed that syllable is sol, despite the SOM song.
DeleteHi Malaika! It's a Thursday theme on a Wednesday puzzle which I did on Tuesday night. HAT TRICKS / HIT TRACKS was probably the best pair. As you say, BILLS OF FARE was borderline; it is a kinda forced plural in that 98.7% of the time it's seen in the singular.
ReplyDeleteI can't see the word BASIL without hearing this classic Fawlty Towers bit. "He put Basil in the Ratatouille??!!!"
Typeover: SOUND before SOLID for "In good shape".
[Spelling Bee: Tues 0, last word this 6er.]
Liked the puzzle a lot. Like most, I suspect, knew something was going on at SATA/IN. Still think there has to be an artificial intelligence connection that someone will figure out. Look forward to the explanation. .
ReplyDeleteMalA/Ika, great and fun write up. They keep getting better and better. Thank you. Enjoyed this one a lot. Listening to the Push cover that many times would turn my brain into a rebus.
Great write-up Malaika! I love how you still post your time. Makes me feel like not an idiot for still regularly being twice, thrice or more times slower than Rex. 😂
ReplyDeleteI think I enjoyed this puzzle slightly more than you. A little on the tough side for a Wed (13:24 for me). But completely agree this one needed a revealer. Especially because the ordering of the A/I wasn't always consistent. Sometimes an answer wanted the 'I' first and the cross wanted the 'A' first.
But, a decent effort with relatively low crosswordese which I always despise.
P.S. You should also know Carson City, it's the capital. 😝
P.P.S. agree on that ELY/CODICIL crossing though I did guess correctly. And I think SOL is actually more correct, but that darn song screwed us all up.
P.P.P.S. Your tomatoes look delicious. Super jealous! 🙂
Another note on SOL...
Delete'Martian's day' or 'Latin life giving orb' would be infinitely better than this old trite trope we always get. I guess I'll just have to make my own puzzle and use one of them. 😂
I'm with Malaika on this one, although I would have called it an Easy-Medium. Time came in just a tad slower than my average Wednesday (but that was a function of the mechanics, not difficulty). Most of the fill did very little for me; hardly a slog, but not a lot of joy, either ... excepting the one charmer: B(A/I)LLS OF F(I/A)RE.
ReplyDeleteBeautifully elegant and swept me off my feet!
The solfège syllable is “sol” but it is frequently changed to “so” when actually singing, so often that it’s often taught as “so” (the consonant can interfere with singing). The names are not arbitrary but taken from the first syllables of a Latin hymn, but several changes were made for greater singability. “Do” was originally “ut” (very nasty for singing) and “ti” is often “si” in Europe. But both sol and so are correct here.
ReplyDeleteMy English music teacher used "so" and the ones who were continentally European trained used "sol."
Delete"Sol" is from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solf%C3%A8ge
ReplyDeleteI'm with you on this one, Malaika: this puzzle screamed for a revealer, and with the extraordinary attention currently being lavished on all things "Artificial Intelligence," you can't have EIGHT rebuses (rebi?) containing the letters A/I and not connect it to a clever AI revealer.
ReplyDeleteLoved this puzzle and also got the theme quickly.
ReplyDeleteSOL is the traditional syllable in Solfège - the way students are taught in music theory classes to sing the 7 (8) pitches in any key of music.
Do, Re Mi Fa Sol La Ti and Do.
The Wikipedia article about the song is interesting: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Do-Re-Mi
ReplyDeleteI, too, wanted a reveal. But it was good without one too. Enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteCHAPSTICK/CHIPSTACK was great. Chip stack is a common phrase in the poker world, and chapstick always reminds me of the SNL skit. "Ooh, chapstick -- can I use some?"
ReplyDeleteWhy does everyone find puzzles where I get stuck easy? :-). Always makes me grin. My first DNF in months. The sticking point for me was billsoffare. I simply , in 66 years of living, have never heard the plural.
ReplyDeleteUsing the app, my rebus isn't taking it. I've tried AI and A/I, even trying to see if order matters, but at this point the fun (and potentially my streak) is lost over an app technicality. 12 minutes tp solve, 6 more minutes just entering rebuses only to fail?! What did people put in to get it to work?
ReplyDeleteOn the app, I just entered one of the correct answers, didn't bother trying some sort of a/i combo in rebus, and I got a completed puzzle. I don't know if either answer will get you a correct answer, but I'm guessing there must be an either/or option.
DeleteI just used one or the other (either an A or an I) and it worked for my android app.
DeleteAI worked for me, are you sure you didn't miss a square somewhere else?
DeleteIn the app, I have tried entering A/I in the squares, AI, and entering one or the other - and it still hasn’t accepted it. I’ve checked the puzzle and re-checked it for other errors, and am coming up empty. I’m resigning myself to losing my streak over this. Very silly.
DeleteAh! Figured it out. I had to enter all A’s in the rebus squares - I was trying to enter one or the other to make one of the answers correct (I.e., I was entering “chapstick” when the app wanted CHAPSTACK).
DeleteI learned CODICIL from Louisa May Alcott in Little Women, when (spoiler) one of the March sisters had a disease that was potentially deadly and another wrote her will.
ReplyDeleteNice to see a western Natick anyway, and not another obscure burgh in upstate New York or Massachusetts.
ReplyDeleteI was just glad to have a reference to Native Americans that wasn't "OTOE." That's popped up several times in the last few weeks.
ReplyDeleteThx, Gary; fun challenge! 😊
ReplyDeleteMed +.
Caught on to the trick at SATAN / PACKING LIST, but still struggled a bit on this one.
Didn't need to rebus; A or I worked just fine.
Platte before PAWNEE.
OAHU always evokes fond memories.
Think I've almost got ENOKI & DKNY down pat.
Very enjoyable battle; liked it a lot! :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness, Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
It nad to be SATAN/SATIN so got the TRICK immediately, with a little WEDNESDAY SCARIES about what the app would want in terms of acceptable fill formats. To slash or not to slash / that was the question.
ReplyDeleteUltimately went with less is more, more or less, and just put in either of the letters.
Got the “almost” message (which can mean you’re off by one letter or have the whole damn puzzle wrong). Before I painstakingly put in the A/I rebuses, noticed that rOT produced TArED, which didn’t make sense. Ah but TAPED/POT did, which got me the win. OHO, AHA and OLE!
This was a fun Thursday Lite puzzle that aptly ran on an ADDAMS DAUGHTER - thanks for the outing, Gary, and the writeup, Malaika!
I have actually been through Ely - loneliest road in America- so I got that but had never heard of codicil. My Natick was otiose/ resiny. Still no idea though I got it correct. Spell check also didn’t like it as I made this comment.
ReplyDeleteI’m with the group who would have preferred a reveal - definitely would like to know why. Nice construction feat. Would prefer that they save the gimmicks for Thursdays though.
ReplyDeleteIs no one complaining about OTIOSE crossing RESINY? That was a Natick for me.
ReplyDeleteGreat write-up, Malaika, I always enjoy yours.
SOL is definitely, was always, the correct word for that note.
Count me in: I had no idea on the S in the OTIOSE crossing with RESINY, even though I went through the alphabet several times.
DeleteYes! I have never heard of otiose! It doesn’t even sound familiar to me as a word.
DeleteOh, this was fun to uncover, and I love the long theme answer pairs, especially CHAPSTICK / CHIPSTACK and BALLS OF FIRE / BILLS OF FARE. That’s superb wordPLAY.
ReplyDeletePlay is what Gary does. His puzzles are made with a wink in his eye. He uses humor, such as in a puzzle he made with Doug Peterson, where the answer to [Two things associated with the tale of Sisyphus?] was ROCK AND ROLLER. He also manipulates letters, as he did today, and as he did on a Thursday puzzle where ETNA was hidden in vertical answers (such as PET NAMES), and the theme was “up the ante”.
Today, there was much to like. Lovely answers, such as CODICIL and GARISH. A rare-in-crosswords five-letter semordnilap (ASSET). And I especially liked the answer ARI, which echoed the theme because its I and A can be reversed.
Strange coincidence. Yesterday’s clue [Aye for an eye] for NOD, presaged today’s theme, if you pronounced “aye” to rhyme with the letter A.
Anyway, wordplay is what Gary does, and wordplay lights me up, so I beam when I see his name atop a puzzle. Gary, thank you for brightening up Crosslandia, and for a splendid outing today.
It bothered me a little that some entries with two vowels flipped both of them (PACKING LIST/PICKING LAST) but others only changed one (SATIN/SATAN). Trying to make the puzzle with no As or Is other than those in the themers would be insane, but asking for no As or Is in the themers that don't follow the theme is reasonable.
ReplyDeleteNevertheless, I enjoyed the experience.
@Malaika - I may be one of those who complained about the proper names in your puzzles in the past (though not last week, when your fine puzzle was a bright spot). It can be very frustrating when every time you start to build momentum you screech to a halt due to a name that the constructor thinks is famous, but in reality most people have never heard of and never will. So, we appreciate it when constructors keep obscure names out of the grid. Like this 'CHER' person.
…”would be insane“. You mean crazy. Er, inane. Er, NUTS.
DeleteIt bothered me that there were other words in the puzzle with A and I (garish, aerie, partiv) that were not part of the theme. Anyone else?
ReplyDeleteI wonder if Gary Larson created this with the assistance of AI?! That would’ve been a cool reveal. (And created some reactions.)
ReplyDeleteGood morning, Malaika. That song is a string of bad puns. Doe for do. Ray for re. Me for mi. And so on. Sew for sol is the second-worst one, right after far for fa. And the one for la is just a feeble cop out.
ReplyDeleteI’m not a big fan of The Sound of Music. Is that showing?
CODICIL is legalese, but a codicil changing a will, often secretly, is a stock plot element (some might say cliche) in mystery fiction.
ReplyDeleteYeah i felt the exact same way. Where’s the cute AI revealer? I mean, it’s gotta be here somewhere right? Wrong! LOL. Happy Boyfriend day to my husband of 15 years, who is still my boyfriend.
ReplyDeleteThat poem is decidedly not an apology. If you’re looking for an example of “sorry-not-sorry”… that poem.
ReplyDeleteI'm wondering if the constructor used AI tools to create his puzzle?
ReplyDeleteDidn't the the A/I thing with SATAN/SATIN, it took me until PRINCES/PRANCES to get the aha! or oho!, depending on your preference. After that it was a good time untangling the rest of them, with many smiles along the way. Cool stuff.
ReplyDeleteSOL is correct. That's the way I learned it so it must be right.
Don't know the poem, took a while to remember CODICIL, and PARTIV was an unknown but had to be right for the "trilogy surprise" in such a goofy series.
I did know the Nevada mining town but there's also an ELY VT just across the river from us, which is pronounced "E-LEE". If you're ever there be sure to say it that way or you'll be considered a flatlander.
@JJK-Totally agree on RESINY. Entered it under protest.
Really great Wednesday, GL. Not exactly Gales of Laughter but lots of chuckles, and thanks for all the fun.
Loved the puzzle, the write-up and the comments today. But just spent 30 minutes trying to come up with a theme consistent reveal. Now my brain is fried.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteWhen I saw the time in the rating (16 minutes), I knew there was a sub-blogger. That's because that was my time! Rex blows me out of the water, so his time would've been something like 6 minutes. Good to have good company!
Pretty cool theme. Either-or/swapped-letters, however you want to describe it. Surprise WedsPuz Rebus. I think the cluing was not ThursPuz enough, plus the fact all the Rebi we're A/I, and not different combos put this into Weds territory, as opposed to a Thurs. IMHO.
Was wondering why SATA/IN and BASA/IL didn't have their first A as an A/I, but deduced (SB word! 😁) that they were the crossers enabling the Themers, ergo not required to have to have the A/I. I think I described that correctly!
CODICIL a new word here. Thankfully crossers we're known. U-turn before HAUL.
Have a great Wednesday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
The fifth note of the scale is normally written as SOL. The lyrics to DO-RE-MI equate the scale notes with words you can remember: DOE, RAY, ME, FAR, SEW, LA, TEA, DOE. But except for LA, none of them are actually spelled, or in the case of FA and SOL pronounced, that way.
ReplyDeleteI also was expecting an Artificial Intelligence revealer, seeing as AI is in the news practically every day. Without it I don't really get the point.
Remember this Top 40 hit track from the fall of 1971?
I’d call it a Wednesday-plus or Thursday-minus, but fun either way. Sol is of course the correct note — Sound of Music replaces most of the notes with homophones because she’s teaching it to children: Doe, ray, me, far (it’s a homophone in Boston) sew, la, tea, doe.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed this.
ReplyDeleteIt had an air of originality about it, both in terms of clueing and fill.
Agree with others though, that an apt revealer ( i.e, A.I) would add consistency and pep.
Uniclues:
5 & 41 D: Moviedom's "Tar"?
7 & 46 D: "Moby-Dick" subject?
11 &56 D: Asian restaurants ( TILE/TALE could also be TOLE).
21 & 53: What colorful pjs might lead to?
13, 39 & 62 D: Welsh John's horny sign off?
1. RESINY CELEB
Delete2. WHALING APOLOGY
3. CHOPSTICK SITES
4. GARISH SLEEP
5. ERECTELY, EVAN.
A delight. Every time I think there's nothing new for a Constructor's Mind to dream up, something new is dreamed up.
ReplyDeleteIt helps that the first themer I stumbled across was SATAN/SATIN. It was easy and obvious and everything was smooth sailing after that. If the first themer had been PACKING LIST/PICKING LAST -- well that would have been harder. I think it was because there were some quite easy theme answers that this was run on a Wednesday and not a Thursday.
I didn't think there would be a revealer -- at least I couldn't think one up myself. My philosophy: Never ditch a good idea because you don't have a revealer. When you have a dense theme and when what's going on is obvious, you don't need one. I say better no revealer than a ho-hum revealer.
And there's no junk in this puzzle either. What a treat after yesterday. Lovely job, Gary. It's quite a fun puzzle.
Whaaaaat? No cutesy reveal? Just some AI squares mixed among some non-AI As and Is. As the wise Malaika MWednesday asks: Why?
ReplyDeleteOnly slow down this morning was EVAN Rachel Wood. It's still surprising to me someone can be in so many movies and win all manner of awards, and still be completely new to me. Thankfully the delightful part four of The Hitchhiker's Guide Trilogy came to the rescue. Oh I also had [Go to] BAT instead of POT. Speaking of going to pot...
Tee-Hee: You know what's [At attention] when it's ERECT. You know, I know, the NYTXW slush pile editor knows. Say it out loud. Say it.
Uniclues:
1 Native drag queen.
2 What follows, "Dude, we were soo high..."
3 Drooled upon A-lister.
4 When you dream of being a drag queen in Oklahoma.
5 Dear Orcas (and those similarly situated): I am SOO sorry we exist.
6 Black Jack tables, at first.
1 PAWNEE HAM CHER
2 POT YARN (~)
3 RESINY CELEB
4 GARISH SLEEP
5 WHALING APOLOGY
6 CHIP STACK SITES
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Drag Race, for many. RU PAUL IV LINE.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I wasted a lot of time trying to fit MANIACALQUESTFORVENGANCE into 7D (“Moby Dick” subject). Had to really make use of the Rebus key. When I figured out that it was wrong, I started WHALING.
ReplyDeleteYou may remember the “Rumble in the Jungle” and the “Thrilla in Manila”, but what about the MELEE in ELY? I’m pretty sure Chuck Wepner was in that one.
I’m a tad disappointed that we got no insight into what Malaika was drinking as she solved this one. But I still liked the write up. Also liked the puzzle and the incredible hidden revealer. Thanks, Gary Larson.
Puzzle was fun. Knew Codicil from my time working at Arcs, Reo, Keg & Spy LLC. Not great lawyers but cheap.
ReplyDelete@JoeD, I remember that song, and I'm not sure what you're thinking but it reminded me that in the dumpster fire that is the US government, it's tin soldiers as far as the eye can see.
Great puzzle and theme except for RESINY (groan). I'm not convinced this is a word people actually use.
ReplyDelete"This baseball feels extra resiny today don't you agree Bob?"
"The umpire swapped the ball due to its resiny quality."
I have to call foul on this one.
Put me down as one who enjoyed it just because it was cool. So thanks to Gary for the puzzle and to Malaika for the thorough write-up and the dissenting opinion, which I can understand.
ReplyDeleteRESINY? gtfoh. is this in reference to baseball? I pitched in high school and beyond. this is not a thing. outside of that a very decent Wednesday w/ a Thursday vibe
ReplyDeleteAn excerpt from a little manual that I wrote for my college music theory students (slightly adapted for the present context):
ReplyDeleteIf you don't care to read it all, here's a summary: The word SOL as a musical note comes from the Latin word SOLVE, which means (in the context of a centuries old hymn) the verb "free" or "release" (in the imperative mood).
The story of SOL begins with a hymn called “Ut Queant Laxis,” written in the 8th century by a Benedictine monk in honor of St. John the Baptist. It was set to music by 11th century Italian music theorist Guido of Arezzo.
This hymn is of particular significance to beginners in music studies because it provides the historical origin of the names of the diatonic scale of notes used in the teaching technique called “Solfège,” also commonly known as “Do, Re, Mi,” etc.
The Latin lyrics are: UT queant laxīs / REsonāre fibrīs / MIra gestōrum / FAmulī tuōrum, / SOLve pollūtī / LAbiī reātum, Sāncte Iohannēs. (My own fairly literal translation: Free the guilt from our polluted lips, O Saint John, so that your servants might be able to sound the wonders of your deeds with open voices.)
Each successive line of the Latin lyrics begins with with a note sung on the next pitch of the diatonic scale: UT, RE, MI, FA, SOL, and LA. In the 17th century, the UT was changed to DO (for reasons to do with a guy called Giovanni Battista DOni), and the scale was completed with the 7th note: SI (from the initials of Sancte Iohannes, Saint John). Finally, in the 19th century, the SI was changed in anglophone countries to TI so that each note would begin with a di fferent letter, giving us the scale we have today: DO, RE, MI, FA, SOL, LA, TI, (DO).
@EDFromHackensack:
ReplyDeletePitch (in this case) does not have anything to do with baseball, you're right. It is an entirely different word (with a different etymology): "a sticky resinous substance that is semi-liquid when hot and hardens when cold, used for waterproofing."
Adding to what others have commented:
ReplyDeleteDo Re Mi Fa Sol La Ti Do are the notes for "moveable do", the system more frequently taught to singers in which "Do" is the root of the scale.
Do Re Mi Fa Sol La "Si" Do correspond to the letter names of the notes of the scale: C D E F G A B C. These are used in romance languages and are the standard even in other languages due to the influence of Italians on music standards. Another fun fact is that German uses "H" for B natural.
The clue doesn't specify which system, so either would get the answer.
In the NYTXW App on my iPad, "A/I" worked for me.
ReplyDeleteOn the tough side for me. Felt and played like a Thursday. Lots of erasures until I caught the theme. Very clever and reasonably smooth given the theme density, liked it. Nice write up Malaika, I did even think about a reveal while solving but now I kinda want one.
ReplyDeleteI found myself a little annoyed with this trickery at first but then warmed to it as I went along. One nice thing I particularly liked was that the theme very much aided in the solve. Once you knew it was a letter flipper, it was easy to fill in the rest. Way too easy for a Thursday but just right for Wednesday IMO with an unusual twist. Nice one Gary, and thank you.
ReplyDeleteHi Malaika!
ReplyDeleteI finished it, but not wanting more. I agree with @Southside Johnny - save the gimmicks for Thursday. This just wasn't for me.
The note is indeed sol. Codicil is a common word. There are lots of “Latin” words that are part of the English language and in common usage. Enjoyed the interesting write- up.
ReplyDeleteAs to "Why?" - for me"Because it's really cool" is plenty. I thought the construction was just the right combination of playful and eye-wideningly impressive, BALLS OF FIRE/ BILLS OF FARE being the pièce de resistance. Unlike many here, I couldn't do a thing with the SATAN/SATIN space; instead, I caught on at could-it-be?...yes! CHAPSTICK/ CHIP STACK. Enjoyable puzzle throughout.
ReplyDelete@Sutsy 10:31 - Thanks for the laugh.
@dragoo 10:56 - Thank you. I'd never thought to even ask where Do-Re-Mi comes from and I appreciate finding out.
Ahar! The A/I invasion of xwords is afoot. Not sure if a revealer was really needed … or what it would be? AIR? [A/I Revealer] -- Well, hey -- in a way the revealer *was* just "air"! sooo… mission accomplished!
ReplyDeleteM&A latched on to the theme mcguffin, right after enterin SAT(A/I)N. Sooo … any revealer woulda been sorta anti-climactic, at our house. It woulda been needed only to add some humor, I reckon. And the themers were kinda already carryin that load. CHIPSTACK/CHAPSTICK … har.
staff weeject pick: AIL. Does have a blatant A/I presence, at least.
honrable mention to: ARI, which would survive the A/I reverse-engineerin to become IRA. [Unlike IERAE, GIRASH, WHILANG, and PIRTAV.]
Nice weeject stacks, in the central N & S margin areas, btw.
some fave stuff: CODICIL. APOLOGY. (U-)HAUL. RESINY[har].
nanosecond burner: Went with DEFILE before DEFAME.
Thanx for a cool WedPuz, Gary Larson dude. Surely do miss yer Fir Sade cartoons.
Masked & Anonymo2Us
**gruntz**
and some attic-cleanin:
**gruntz**
Is this THE Gary Larson, author/inventor of The Far Side cartoons? See what I did there (used a/i)😜
ReplyDeleteSo much is being made of AI these days and I still don't see an upside for humanity. Medical uses? Maybe. Everything else is so eerily Terminator-esque it makes me fear for those who will live in the 22nd century.
Door swings open at 2D...SATIN/SATAN. Let's open some others. A maze. It involves AI. The idea of AI taking control of the world scares me. I look at BALLS OF FIRE and then it turns into BILLS OF FARE. Flip flop....That's what we're going to get.
ReplyDeleteBut do you like it? I'd say yes, BUT...The ending...Where's the ending. You must have one. No...I guess not today.
I really wanted to know what was behind door #12. Nothing. Empty. Why couldn't the computer come up with something. I don't have an answer...I'm still driving the REO.
ELY.....I've been. It looks exactly like the picture @Malaika showed. I once had a travel agency I'd visit (once) so I went. Nevada is a funny State. It's beautiful in some parts and pretty awful in others. I would groan when I had to go to Reno or Vegas. The other smallish towns were OK if they have a mountain surrounding them. They always had a saloon of some sort and you couldn't escape the slot machines. The people? Interesting. Everyone drives a pickup truck and they like to discuss politics. Guess who they will vote for! The Tahoe side of Nevada is prettier than the California side. Still...slot machines. Is michanes a word?
Anyway.... A revealer would've upped my aha. I still had them. A lot more than yesterday.
The SOL is out today so I'm off to walk the pups and pick cherry tomatoes.....
Theme was annoying and OTIOSE and CODICIL are some naval gazing answers for a wed
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ReplyDelete@Malaika: I can tell you are a serious tomato grower when you share the names of your plants, and you obviously are a successful one too. With the Cherry variety, it’s hard to beat Super Sweet for flavor but they are tiny. My favorite- if I can find them - is a Large Red Cherry. They are about twice the size of the average cherry/grape tomato, have excellent flavor and a very tender peel. They’re not widely available though, and normally I can only find them at green houses. I’ve also ordered seeds from the Totally Tomatoes site and had success starting my own plants. If you have a sunny window and some good potting soil, nature will do the rest.
Somehow I put in SATIN without noticing that that was not how SATAN spells his or her name; then I got PACKING LIST, but thought PICKING LIST meant your choices were constrained by whoever made the list. It took me until CHAPSTICK/CHIP STACK to really understand what was going on--but I think that made it more fun to solve, as I was puzzling all the way.
ReplyDeleteWhat's with the direction from Eden to Nod? I know about the Garden of Eden and the Land of Nod, but didn't know you could get from one to another -- or are they also the names of Nevada mining towns?
Anyway, my favorite ELY is the one in Minnesota, jumping off point for several wonderful canoe trips I made in my youth.
@Malaika, you do realize he's not really talking about plums, right? (Well, I just looked it up--the version I learned said "saving for someone else," rather than "breakfast," so maybe I'm wrong.)
ive tried all of the suggestions above, but the app for my ipad still won't accept the solution :(
ReplyDelete@JJK (7:13) Yes, I had that same Natick. OTIOSE was one I don’t recall seeing before and RESINY is highly suspect.
ReplyDelete@jberg - Nod is mentioned in Genesis 4: "And Cain went out from the presence of the Lord, and dwelt in the Land of Nod, on the east of Eden." Steinbeck's "East of Eden" takes its title from this reference.
ReplyDelete@Photomatte – the constructor isn't THE Gary Larson, he's confirmed it in the past.
ReplyDelete@JD 10:31 – No particular reason for linking that song other than that 38-down made me think of it. It kind of grated on me at the time because it would get stuck in my head for hours.
CODICIL, OTIOSE, PARTIV, RESINY...
ReplyDeleteTough puzzle!
Just last night, I was smugly congratulating myself on how great I’ve gotten at crosswords, so I probably needed this puzzle to remind me that I’m actually not very good at them at all. Like many people, I got the theme early on, but I just couldn’t make it work for some reason. Eventually, I did get it sorted and was glad to have finished, but lesson learned. No more bragging to myself about how clever I am and no more brushing off Wednesdays as glorified Tuesdays!
ReplyDeleteI didn't realize you are doing the Vulture 10x10 - congratulations! they're delightful!
ReplyDeleteI didn't think of "pitch" as a verb. leading me to sticky baseballs. I thought of a substance. I've known the word with that meaningful all my life. Checking my 2006 dictionary I see the first def. for Pitch:
ReplyDelete" n. 1. Any of various thick, dark, sticky substances....from coal tar, wood tar, or petroleum..." Those from wood would be resiny (tho I would have said resinous)
I did not find this definition on google except in reference to lines in the Bible.
2006 was not so long ago - could this meaning have dropped from the language that quickly?
Agree with those who found Bill soft fare Balls of fire delightful.
Quite a fun gimmick, but the brutal northwest and center-east sections led me to give up.
ReplyDeleteas others said, if "A/I" isn't working for your solve, try using just A or I in those squares.
Everyone seems to think it was an AI theme… maybe it was actually an IA theme - an ode to the state of Iowa!
ReplyDeleteI know that it's mostly on me if I get stumped by a crossword. That said, when evaluating how clever a puzzle is, I think you have to take into account whether the author was able to accomplish the rebus without having to use a bunch of $100 words to make it fit.
ReplyDeleteI also don't love a non-thursday rebus. I begrudgingly accept them on thursdays, but knowing that any box could contain any number/combination of letters any day of the week is paranoia-inducing.
Recovering attorney here who is also a geography nerd, so ELY and CODICIL were gimmes. I completed the puzzle on the app just using A in every one of those dual-letter squares and it worked fine, as someone pointed out above. Broke my two-week better-than-my-average streak by only a few seconds, but this was kind of a clunky puzzle. Enjoyed it though.
ReplyDeleteDragoo - nice contributions today! I don’t recall you on here, or at least not the photo.
ReplyDeletePedantic post warning: a Natick is for crossings of two proper nouns, so while OTIOSE & RESINY may be relatively unfamiliar, they are just garden variety unknowns.
@sharonAK... on Merriam-Webster for pitch, the first "noun" section at the top is that meaning.
ReplyDeleteI agree with others on SOL. When singing solfège, the L is usually silent, which leads to the common misspelling.
ReplyDeleteAs for ELY, there are many of them, presumably all named after the English town with the famous cathedral. I thought I had been through Ely, NV on I-80, but it turns out that was Elko. I've been to the one in Minnesota, though.
Shame on Shortz! Allowing a word that people may not have heard of. In a crossword. On National Emergency False Alarm Wednesday!
ReplyDeleteSorry, I find the gripes against expanding one’s vocabulary a bit, oh what’s the word? Begins with an O, sounds like Odious, if that’s a word…
o·ti·ose
/ˈōdēˌōz,ˈōSHēˌōz/
adjective
serving no practical purpose or result.
"he did fuss, uttering otiose explanations"
All this guessing about whether AI wrote the puzzle and became the theme!
ReplyDeleteAs any Scrabble player should know, the theme was clearly the South American three-toed sloth. The revealer was hidden -- hanging from a tree above the puzzle.
Solved without knowing that there was an A/I element.
ReplyDeleteI think a large part of the reason SOL (which is the correct term in every solfege class I took) is hard to hear (and sounds more like SO) is because usually we sing up the scale from SOL to LA, and one would essentially have to add a vowel or other unnatural space to re-attack the L sound between SOL and LA in order to emphasize the L at the end of SOL.
ReplyDeleteFWIW, it is not just SI in Europe but also in every solfege class I know of in America, including mine at Juilliard. Every major conservatory uses DO RE MI FA SOL LA SI and then DO again. We do not use moveable DO (a way of showing what key the music is in) and we do not generally use other words for accidentals of the notes. DO is always C and SOL is always G, for example. It makes sight singing much easier. You can practice your Dandelot however you want now! Have fun!
My cup of Wednesday tea. Fun, a little silly, clever and consistent. What’s not to love? Gary Larson is one of my favorite constructors. I’m almost always on his wavelength. Today was no exception.
ReplyDeleteGood to see your byline today, Malaika. Tomatoes are gorgeous. Good job. I only wish we were at the end of the summer. One of the things to enjoy here is our very long tomato season. We can start plants inside in February, sometimes take them outside in late March and when the weather is as warm as it has been here, we often have vine ripened ’maters to Thanksgiving! We do need to baby them through the blast furnace heat of the summer with sun shades and extra careful watering but the rewards are worth the effort.
See y’all tomorrow.
the problem with cherry/grape tomatoes is that the vine never stops growing, so ya need some kind of trellis. well, if I cared enough. I just let the vines fall over. here in sunny NE, there's been so much rain late that the full size fruit keep drinking and burst, with the attendant critters taking residence.
ReplyDeleteanyone who has ever seen Animal House knows the word CODICIL
ReplyDeleteThere is a ROPA tomato, and a POET is a thing. Just sayin'.
ReplyDeleteCELEB YARN
ReplyDeleteCHER is just A BALL_OFFIRE,
the HITTRACKS she TAPED inspire.
Her ASSET is ELITE, no question,
SOL I PLED and ASTER for A LESSEN.
--- MIKE ELY
Now it's official. AI has gotten into everything.
ReplyDeleteKnew a the rebi feature was lurking, but HOW MANY TIMES MUST IT BE THERE?
I always think this is a great way for a constructor to "cheat" and get in extra letters. IMHO
Diana, LIW
For those saying they haven't seen otiose before, you must be knew to xword puzzles, because this was the 111th time it's been in NYT Xword puzzles alone. What was new for me, was it being clued using superfluous for the clue. In the past it has been usually clued with lazy or a synonym of lazy.
ReplyDeleteI learned the music scale 65 years ago, and I was taught that it was SO for the fifth note. Granted, I was in 2nd grade, and never went beyond an intro to music class in either highschool or college. But my first time seeing SOL for the 5th note was in a xword puzzle. Is this an American(English) thing? Or perhaps that the L of sol gets lost in the L of la when singing the scale?
ReplyDelete@Anon 4:45 - exactly why I used SOL for SO in the above verse.
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