Monday, November 10, 2025

Condo honcho, casually / MON 11-10-25 / Mentions directly on X / Blog commenter who is best ignored / Possible outcome of a bad sprain / People spouting zealous rhetoric / Roman Forum greeting / Old-time anestetic

Constructor: Zhouqin Burnikel

Relative difficulty: Medium (normal Monday, solved Downs-only)


THEME: "I'VE GOT YOU COVERED" (39A: "Leave it to me" ... and a hint to the circled letters in this puzzle) — the "covering" (i.e. outer squares, indicated today by circles) of four answers is something that "has you covered" if you are one of various kinds of animal:

Theme answers:
  • HAIL, CAESAR (18A: Roman Forum greeting)
  • SCALP MASSAGES (23A: Head rubs that relieve tension)
  • FIRE BREATHERS (51A: People spouting zealous rhetoric)
  • SHORT SPELL (63A: Brief period of time)
Word of the Day: SHEA butter (15D: ___ butter (lotion ingredient)) —

 

Shea butter (/ʃ/ SHEE/ˈʃə/ SHEE, or /ʃ/ SHAYBambaraߛߌ߮ߕߎߟߎromanized: sìtulu) is a fat (triglyceride; mainly oleic acid and stearic acid) extracted from the nut of the African shea tree (Vitellaria paradoxa). It is ivory in color when raw and commonly dyed yellow with borututu root or palm oil. It is widely used in cosmetics as a moisturizer or lotion. It is edible and is used in food preparation in some African countries. It is occasionally mixed with other oils as a substitute for cocoa butter, although the taste is noticeably different.

The English word "shea" comes from , the tree's name in Bambara. It is known by many local names, such as kpakahili in the Dagbani languagetaama in the Wali languagenkuto in Twikaɗe or kaɗanya in Hausaòkwùmá in the Igbo languageòrí in the Yoruba language, and karité in the Wolof language of Senegal. It is also known as Moo-yaa in the Acholi language. (wikipedia)

• • •


This theme could've used more. Another level. Why are all the coverings the surfaces of animals? Nothing about the revealer is particularly animalish. It's interesting that the "coverings" have a kind of coherence, but it's weird that the revealer doesn't make any reference to that at all. Worse, the "coverings" don't really "cover" anything. They are just the outer letters of the answers. What's *inside* those letters is ... gibberish. I've got you covered? Sure, if "you" are named PMASSAG or ORTSP, I guess. Lastly, I don't think I've ever seen anyone referred to as a FIREBREATHER who wasn't a dragon. A firebrand, sure. But I don't love FIREBREATHERS as an answer. The dictionary has it as a word, though, so I don't have much more than my own aversion to justify my objection to that answer. There's an inventiveness and cleverness on display here, I just don't think the whole thing really works. Gotta stick the landing, and this the landing here feels unstuck. 


Pretty easy Downs-only solve, with the only tricky parts coming (very predictably) with the longest of the Downs. I had "WHAT-" and absolutely no idea what was supposed to follow (3D: "Isn't this pleasant!"). The first guess I ventured was "WHAT A DREAM!" (which, as you can say, is right in the vast majority of its particulars). Paula DEEN is somebody, so that "D" didn't seem obviously wrong. But then came SMOLI, which is most decidedly not a thing, so I had put in STOLI, and that helped me see TREAT. TEEN >>>>> Paula DEEN, so I was happy with how that turned out. I was less happy in the SE, where I had to wrestle not only with a pesky long Down (TORN TENDON), but had to deal with an adjacent short answer that I botched: I had 65D: Mentions directly on X as RTS, not ATS. Aside from the fact that I would prefer never to see any references to that murderous racist's website ("X") ever again, thanks ...



... I don't think ATS is great fill. I definitely am familiar with "at" as a verb meaning "mention/tag in a social media post," but it's ugly fill. Anyway, with RTS in there, I had RU-IO, as one of the Acrosses, and I'm pretty sure you can see why *that* was looking awfully unpleasant. Only one plausible letter could go in RU-IO, and it wasn't one I was looking forward to writing in. Not sure how I finally got around to changing RTS to ATS. Or how I saw TORN TENDON, which seems like its own, very severe thing, and not the result of a mere sprain (28D: Possible outcome of a bad sprain). The only thing I wanted for the longest time at SAU-E was SAUCE, which put a "C" at the beginning of TORN TENDON. Finally seeing that "T" might also work there must've been what tipped me in the right direction. "T" to TORN TENDON to AUDIO (not RUBIO) to ATS. Not the most fun I've ever had Downs-only solving. But like I said, it was one of only two places that caused any trouble. Everything else was straightforward.


Not sure why you need so many cheater squares* in a simple Monday puzzle (four of them: before RAS/after SMS, and before STOLI/after SAUTE). I suppose if the quality of the fill is really suffering, then adding a handful of cheaters is a fine way to clean things up. Fill gets shorter and (usually) more boring / dull / crosswordesey, but that's better than awkward and strained ... though the very presence of RAS and SMS next to those cheater squares sort of suggests that those extra black squares didn't really buy that much in the way of sparkle. 


Bullets:
  • 17A: 6'4", 186 lbs. and others (STATS) — er, I guess. They're measurements, which are a kind of stat. But then any fact can be a stat if you wish hard enough. I think of STATS as numbers related to sports performance.
  • 20A: "Santa Baby" singer Eartha (KITT) — too soon, puzzle. Too soon. Please wait til after Thanksgiving before you start throwing the Christmas music at me.
  • 68A: Blog commenter who is best ignored (TROLL) — yes. Good advice, puzzle. Good, sane advice.
  • 25D: Condo honcho, casually (SUPE) — short for "superintendent." "Condo honcho," aside from being patently ridiculous as a phrase (not convinced anyone has ever put those words next to each other before today), already feels pretty "casual." Not sure you need that "casually" there.
  • 11D: Lhasa ___ (dog) (APSO) — I've seen this dog's name in crosswords forever, and yet I always experience a little hesitation when spelling it—either part of it. I always want the two parts to "agree" as to their endings, so I'm like "LHASO APSO? LHASA APSA?" Also, I frequently forget which highly unusual letter combination LHASA begins with, which is to say I kinda want to spell it LLASA (like LLAMA or Mario Vargas LLOSA). The double "L" is a completely different pronunciation from the "LH" ("LL" = more like the "Y" in "young" or "yurt"), and it's specifically Spanish, which "Lhasa" obviously isn't, so you'd think I wouldn't make this particular spelling mistake. You'd think.
See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

P.S. yesterday's Phoodle answer was hilariously obscure, but I'm not playing that particular game to "win," I'm playing to learn (about food and food-related terms). Today's answer, you'll be happy to know (or won't care about at all, whatever), is much easier. I'm told weekend answers are typically much tougher. I checked the NYTXW database to see if yesterday's Phoodle answer had ever been used, and ... sure enough. There it is. Or was. A single appearance 44 years ago. Crosswordese so pure it barely exists. It's like experimental crosswordese. Theoretical crosswordese. But I still like knowing it!

[ASHET!]

*"cheater squares" are black squares that do not add to the overall word count of a puzzle. They are added to a grid solely to make it easier to fill.  

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64 comments:

  1. My five favorite original clues from last week
    (in order of appearance):

    1. Thrill seeker's line (6)
    2. Shipping container (6)
    3. Something often hit without you seeing it (6)
    4. Overseer of Artemis (4)
    5. Traveler's check, in brief? (3)(3)


    BUNGEE
    MAILER
    PINATA
    NASA
    NBA REF

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My favorite encore clues from last week:

      [Get together for a party] (6)
      [Red state?] (4)


      CAUCUS
      OHIO

      Delete
  2. Bob Mills6:13 AM

    Nice easy Monday that I solved as a themeless. One nit...nobody in Rome spoke English during Caesar's reign.

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    Replies
    1. Good catch! I’m surprised that one made it through the review process. You would think the editors would have developed an eye for that kind of inconsistency with all of the experience they have.

      Delete
    2. True. Except possibly in "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" (maybe someone can confirm or deny?).

      How many Monday gaskets would have been blown by Ave CAESAR? (No telling how many people might have nitpicked that one.)

      Delete
    3. Funny…yes I first thought of “ave” but didn’t consider CAESAR to start because I was thinking there was a long time in the forum before CAESAR existed. Anyway…I didn’t think long about it because my eyes can go to down clues without toggling on the iPad app so HAILCAESAR went in pretty fast.

      Delete
    4. No one called it the Roman Forum back then either. Just reminding you that this is a word game in 2025.

      Delete
    5. ChrisS3:41 PM

      Forum is a latin word so it may have been called the forum at that time, though unlikly the Roman Forum

      Delete
  3. I liked the concept but don’t really recognize the circles so this ultimately falls flat for me. The themers are all solid and the central spanning revealer is cool.

    Silver Haired Daddy of Mine

    Had the same too early thought as Rex - especially after a recent Costco visit. Overall fill is workmanlike - what I expect from CC. Still don’t care for the term SWOLE.

    Bon Iver

    Pleasant enough Monday morning solve.

    Living Colour

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  4. I guess I’m the first to point out that tendons are not involved in sprains, ligaments are. They some in three grades: 1,2,3. A grade 3 sprain is a full-thickness tear of the sprained ligament. So, yeah, bad clue. Now a strain might involve a tendon, but not a sprain.

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    Replies
    1. You could sort of lawyer this by saying the same incident that caused the sprain also caused a torn tendon, but that's pretty iffy and it's a bad clue. Science and NYTXW editors often don't get along.

      Delete
    2. As a non-doc my thought was, huh…I guess I’ve never heard of tendons referred to in “sprains.” You confirmed. But…most of us just think…”ligaments, tendons”…all that “connective stuff.”

      Delete
    3. Beezer
      Exactly my reaction about sprain.
      Close enough for crosswords!

      Delete
  5. I love how the circles letters bookend the theme answers, “covering” them, in a way, to bolster the theme (Hi, @Rex!). I also love the consistency in that each theme answer is a two-word phrase.

    These are lovely touches, something this constructor excels at.

    Speaking of I’VE GOT YOU COVERED, I love seeing SNOW and HAIL in the grid.

    Some sweet serendipities as well:
    • Rhyming crosses of SWOLE/TROLL and SPELL/ELLE.
    • A rare-in-crosswords five-letter palindrome (STATS).
    • An enniad of long-O-enders, in ZIPPO, AUDIO, POLIO, POLO, RIO, PESO, ECO, APSO and EL TORO.

    And in my constant drive to guess the revealer after uncovering the theme answers, a skill I’m weak at, I couldn’t get it without looking at its clue, but after I did read that clue, my brain hollered I’VE GOT YOU COVERED! That, my friends, triggered a fist-pump feeling for the ages.

    C.C., your puzzles make me smile all the time, and you did it again today. Thank you!

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  6. I'm supposing reasonably easy as a Downs Only, except for that annoying ATS in the SE corner, which I hadn't seen before (I've spent virtually zero time on the stupidly named X, the main exception being an occasional follower of a friend about three years ago -- thank goodness I've mostly avoided the sewage that ROILS around in there). Anyway, it SURE is a different experience solving this way...

    I agree with Rex about the cluing for SUPE -- not great. Kind of defensible, insofar as superintendents and honchos are both types of managers, but I think of "honcho" as meaning a boss type of manager, as in head honcho, whereas a SUPE is one who manages problems in a building. A maintenance man (or woman), a factotum. Not a boss per se.

    The commenter smalltowndoc casts doubt on the accuracy of the clue for TORN TENDON, and it made me realize that I never stopped to ask myself what is the distinction between a ligament and a TENDON. Probably all of you know that a tendon connects muscle to bone and a ligament connects bone to bone. And now I know too.

    Have a good day, y'all.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:15 AM

      @tht -- ATS is not limited to X; I just did it to you. But the puzzle has it wrong, it's spelled "@S."

      Delete
    2. EasyEd9:25 AM

      Hi @tht, not sure what your experience has been but in every apartment building I’ve lived in, in NY or London, the SUPE has considered himself a super head honcho, much to the humorous annoyance of residents.

      Delete
    3. Oh, gotcha! Of course. Thanks.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous10:42 AM

      @EasyEd. You raise a good point! According to the laws of human nature, it would be only natural for a SUPE to come to regard the occupants themselves as problems to be managed and to adopt a condescending attitude towards.

      I've lived in apartments now and then (including in London), but never to the point where I had to call up the super for anything. I've lived a sheltered life...

      Delete
    5. I live in a 29-floor co-op building in Manhattan, where our superintendent supervises a staff of 14 (maintenance, doormen, handymen). Head honcho, he is.

      Delete
    6. @mbr. Right; I guess I was thinking purely of maintenance. I hereby state that honcho is fine after all. :-)

      Delete
    7. About Head honcho clue answer supe
      I am sure it is used in other cities but I always associate supe with NYC which has a lot of large apartment buildings ( many of them co-ops, another NYC thing)

      Delete
    8. ChrisS3:32 PM

      I have avoided X for my whole life, only occasionally opening links to sports highlights so ATS ruined my downs only. I live in the suburbs in a sub that is technically a condo (each lot is a unit) so I was thinking in only my small context (no supes) so that one took a while to get filled in.

      Delete
  7. Hey All !
    16 wider today, to GeT YOU COVERED.

    Nice Theme idea. Nice to see a CC MonPuz. It's been a minute.

    Neat to find a Z in a puz when not expecting it. As in, normally, you really don't think a Z will be in a MonPuz, but when you find a non-forced one, I think it's neat. Just me?

    Fill good, four Themers plus a Revealer, MonPuz appropriate cluing. Typical CC-ness. 😁

    Have a great Monday!

    One F
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

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  8. Anonymous7:46 AM

    A rare "meh" review of a Zhouqin Burnikel puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Interesting. CC’s on a bit of a roll. She had a fine effort in yesterday’s LAT and backs that up with a very workmanlike Monday here in the Old Gray Lady today. Congrats !

    I see that pesky “Gotta bounce!” is back for an encore. If memory serves, it was the cause of some consternation for some of us not too long ago.

    I thought Rex was a little tough on the theme today, but not unexpected as he is in the upper quartile when it comes to theme pickiness. I still consider myself fortunate if I can even discern the theme construct without needing him to explain it to me.

    I see we have two brand names crossing each other (STOLI x LIPTON). I wonder if that’s a subliminal message from the editors that we are in for a long week. Also, somewhat surprisingly, Rex gave YALE a pass today. I think he may have been preoccupied (with good reason) with the app formerly known as Twitter.

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    Replies
    1. Reading the news, every week feels like a long week. (Note to self: don't get too distracted. Head down. Focus.)

      I heard the phrase "gotta bounce" on SNL two days ago, so I can only suppose it has currency currently.

      Delete
  10. I was really expecting the coverings to cover something or someone. What is the antecedent of 'you' in I'VE GOT YOU COVERED? I thought the words under the circles would be people or animals or something that was being covered, but nothing.

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  11. I can’t think of another animal covering. JU(S)T (K)(I)DDI(N)G!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You come up with some good ones, but that is one of your best!

      Delete
    2. Nice!

      Delete
  12. Anonymous8:15 AM

    Are we not allowed to have X in a puzzle anymore then? We have Che all the time and he was at least murderous, like his mentors: Lenin, Stalin, Castro. IT'S A CROSSWORD FOLKS.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:59 PM

      Yeah, but Che looks cool on a t-shirt, so he's okay.

      Delete
  13. I think expecting the thing covered to be actually spelled out inside the covering would be a constraint too far. I took the "you" to be enough to indicate a living creature; I mean I wouldn't address a plank as "you" even if it were covered by paint. I liked the theme so much I wrote it in without checking if it would fit--it was just so right.

    Is a TSP smallish? Depends on its content. A teaspoon of very hot peppers in your soup might seem like a big thing.

    ZIlch before ZIPPO; you can tell I don't solve downs-only.

    A non-Christmas clue might be "Eartha who was cancelled for her anti-war declaration."

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  14. Downs only, I really struggled with this. I got a lot of words but not enough to get many across answers to fill in, so I gave up and looked at some cross clues.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Would you rather have some old-time anesthetic or some unrefined gold? It's the classic ETHER/ore question.

    Julius: Hey Cleo! What is that stuff coming down? SNOW?
    Cleopatra: HAILCAESAR
    Julius: Thanks, but I was hoping for a report on weather conditions.
    Cleopatra: Can't help you there. You hungry?
    Julius: Yeah, I think I'll get a Gallic pizza. It gives me bad breath, but I can eat a whole pie and still want more. Brutus claimed to have had two the other day! I didn't believe him. I said "You et two, Bruti?"
    Cleopatra: He has lot of Gaul! What'd he say?
    Julius: Something about me joining his friends, the Idesofs,for a walk. I think he said "Be where the Idesofs march."
    Cleopatra: Sounds weird but you might take a stab at it.

    I imagine that @Gary Jugert will be disappointed on the TeeHee quotient today. All PISTOLS, no sex.

    I guess that about COVERs it for me. Quick D.O. Thanks, Zhouqin Burnikel.

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  16. This was very whooshy for me today (I don't play Downs-only), and I paid absolutely no attention to the theme, because I didnt need to. Agree with Rex about FIREBREATHERS not being a real thing.Otherwise, if there wasn't much to rave about, there wasn't much to complain about, either, so although I can't say WHAT A TREAT, it was an acceptable start to the week.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:26 AM

      OSHA probably frowns on the occupation but Firebreathers can be quite entertaining.

      Delete
  17. RP - you can add LAKSA, the Asian soup to your (and my) confusion.

    - 68A didn’t come soon enough for @Nancy. Miss you.

    - I love the poster for Parapluies de Cherbourg - I discovered the movie last year and couldn’t believe what I was seeing. Actually sung through the whole movie!


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  18. Don’t ever try to buy a Halloween costume or decoration in anything other than a Spirit Halloween store in late October - the Xmas decorations and sales have already started.

    ReplyDelete
  19. I thought this puzzle was a fine Monday specimen. CC's comment on Wordplay mentioned that she would rather have had the revealer at the end of the grid. For me, getting the revealer didn't ruin the solve for the rest of the puzzle, it merely connected the circled answers so the reveal placement is fine in the center.

    Does anyone ever say 18A as their salad is delivered to the table?

    Thanks, Zhouqin Burnikel!

    ReplyDelete
  20. DAVinHOP10:09 AM

    This was so ridiculously easy that my wife and I decided to try downs only on Mondays henceforth. We never noticed or needed to know the relevance of the circled letters.

    Hilarious Julius and Cleo vignette, @Egs.

    We tried the Phoodle; not exactly our cup of tea. The answer (avoiding a spoiler here) seemed to be going into an advertisement for the never-too-rich Jeff Bezos, but I guess ends up poking fun at his enterprise.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Anonymous10:28 AM

    theme was not even worth trying to figure out

    ReplyDelete
  22. I solved as a themeless then came here to see what the silly circles were all about. But it's a CC puzzle, so no complaints. Except to mention that the NYT has VOLT in their Xword & Mini. Thank you, CC :)

    ReplyDelete
  23. Oops - meant MIDI

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  24. Easy. No costly erasures and no WOEs.

    Fun solve, cute/amusing theme, with not much junk and quite a bit of sparkle, liked it a lot more than @Rex did.

    Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1060 was pretty easy for a Croce which put it in the medium NYT Saturday range for me. Good luck!

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  25. I live in an Upper West Side co-op in Manhattan. There are 53 apartments. The SUPER has 4 doormen and 2 handymen reporting to him, so he's definitely the CONDO HONCHO.

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  26. I thought it was charming, I liked the whimsical repurposing in I'VE GOT YOU COVERED and the theme's "coverage" of so much of the animal kingdom - too bad there wasn't room for @Lewis's JUSTKIDDING to give the amphibians their SKIN.

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  27. Well, hey --- IVEGOTYOUCOVERED probably's slightly better than ITSGOTEWECOVERED, at least.
    Always nice to see The Circles on a MonPuz. Plus, a bonus large 16x15 puzgrid. Plus, constructioneer CC, of course.

    staff weeject pick: ONT - cuz (EL) TORO has it covered, capital-wise. Primo quad weeject stack in puzgrid central, btw.
    fave moo-cow easy-E MonPuz clue: {"So long, amigo"} = ADIOS.

    some other fave CC-fill: ZIPPO. WHATATREAT [covered in WHEAT]. OHSURE.

    Didn't spot any ?-marker clues. Wish they'd have a token one, just to help train them beginnin solvers. {Naps while getting up?} = a four-letter answer*, say.

    Thanx for yer great Monday coverage, Ms. Burnikel darlin. Good to see yah, again.

    Masked & Anonymo3Us

    ... TDE, anyone? ...

    "Tidal Disruption Event" - 8x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:

    **gruntz**

    M&A

    p.s. * = SPAN.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Anonymous12:01 PM

    Who is CC?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Today's constructor also goes by C.C. Burnikel

      Delete
  29. Rex has a point that it would be great if the un-circled letters spelled something. But at least the circles all come at the beginning and end. Not terribly exciting, but it is Monday.

    Solving down clues only, for 28 down I had the TORN part but all I could think of was MUSCLE. Can you tear a muscle? Oh and I forgot that "Mentions directly" is referred to as ATS. "At" as a verb?... goofy.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Anonymous1:50 PM

    I feel like I’ve heard hard-throwing relief pitchers sometimes referred to as “fire breathers”.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Anonymous2:50 PM

    Agreed on all counts, Rex. Great songs linked today too 💃

    ReplyDelete
  32. I’m having a full blown plumbing crisis so don’t have much time to post. My cat is wanting to escape, the plumber is making noise and I have mopped up what I can for now.

    I’m always excited to see this byline; Ms. Burnikel is a real favorite. For the first time ever though, I just don’t get this theme. Sure all the circled letters form words that are things that “cover” various animals. Is that it? Are the remaining letters after the circles reveal their coverings meaningful? If not, why are the theme answers split over a longer word with the leftovers not meaning anything?

    Am I just overthinking again? Puzzle was super easy for me, just a confusing theme - or maybe not.

    ReplyDelete
  33. SharonAK4:03 PM

    Thanks again EGs for the fun read.
    Lewis I liked your noticing the circled words coming at beginning and end and there for "covering" And I always like being reminded of clever rules. I especially liked the clues for bungee cords and piñata

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  34. Nancy is commenting via email to those who give her their email addresses. Her complaint with the one: a snoozefest.
    I guessed that figuring out the gimmick wasn’t worth it. I let Rex explain it to me.
    I thought there was too much crosswordese even for a Monday but I still enjoyed the puzzle.
    Someone asked about the constructor’s name. To add to what was said already , the constructor is a longtime contributor of crossword puzzles in the Times. Her legal name is what the Times listed. Her “first name” is the modern transliteration of her given Chinese name. But since Taiwan accepted the the new transliteration system much later than Beijing; she, who is from Taiwan, got used the old system. C C. Is an abbreviation of Chow-Ch’in which is the older version of Zhouqin. The pronunciation is the sane She prefers being called C C But the Times won’t let her use it.

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    Replies
    1. Would love to hear Nancy comments via email. She was the main reason I looked at the blog comments. I tried to add my name/address, but haven't received anything.

      Delete
  35. I’m exhausted. Had a plumbing crisis that went from bad to worse to pretty catastrophic today. And I was so excited to see the byline of one of our very frequent constructors - a huge favorite of mine - today. Ms. Burnikel (I know she’s “CC” to those of you fortunate enough to really “know her”, but I’m not part of the in crowd and have so much respect for her prowess . . .) is such a familiar name and I expect cleverness and creativity especially when she offers us a themed puzzle. Today though, my literal s!#t storm may have so discombobulated me that I missed the cleverness I always find in her work.

    Sure, the puzzle was very easy. The circles let us know in fine Monday style where the themers were, and the reveal made sense. All the theme answers cover animals. But post-solve, I looked over the grid and am still wondering what I missed. Why split the theme letters? Are the non-theme letters in each longer answer somehow connected to the theme and I missed it?
    Even after reading comments and analysis from OFL, I’m still not feeling that - as @Rex said - Ms. B stuck the landing. And I am more than ready and willing to eat these words if someone will kindly explain what I missed.

    The plumbers are mercifully gone and I’m going to have a very large G & T with extra G and lots of lime - perhaps to match my sour mood.

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    Replies
    1. Here's to a better day tomorrow!

      I can't see that you missed anything in today's.

      Delete
  36. ¿No es esto agradable?

    The only thing I am about to be covered in is ear hair. Nobody warns old men about the hours with a tweezer you'll be enduring. And it's not even in the pursuit of beauty. You just don't wanna be able to braid the stuff. What reproductive advantages are there in having furry ears? Warm tones?

    I bought new soap for the shower and it's shea and and vanilla. It smells like my garage. Previously we had rose scented and it smelled like an olfactory engineer designed it based on an Instagram picture of a rose, and not the actual scent of a rose.

    Way too much gunk and not nearly enough humor for a Monday.

    Less matadors please.

    ❤️ ZIPPO.

    😩 SUPE.

    People: 2
    Places: 2
    Products: 9
    Partials: 10 {sigh}
    Foreignisms: 4
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 27 of 79 (34%)

    Funny Factor: 0 😫

    Uniclues:

    1 Number of times you hear "Hey buddy," before you hear, "And you too?" in Latin.
    2 Cannibal's favorite dish.
    3 Gaggle of girls doing shots.

    1 HAIL CAESAR STATS (~)
    2 TEEN SAUTÉ
    3 STOLI CLOT

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Where party animal fish bait get married. THE WILD ASS WORM ALTAR.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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    Replies
    1. @Gary J: “Warm tones?” My best laugh of the day!! Thanks!

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