Nimble, zigzagging maneuver / FRI 1-16-26 / Goal-oriented global org.? / Shortest-reigning English monarch (9 days) / Leading character on social media? / Some terrarium denizens / White House partner, for short / Classic 1926 poem associated with the Harlem Renaissance / Place for trading stories? / Dialect featured in the literature of Alice Walker and Toni Morrison
Friday, January 16, 2026
Constructor: Kyle Dolan
Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging
Word of the Day: JINK (25D: Nimble, zigzagging maneuver) —
1: a quick evasive turn : slip2
Besides the fact that jink first appears in Scottish English, the exact origins of this shifty little word are unknown. What can be said with certainty is that the word has always expressed a quick or unexpected motion. For instance, in two poems from 1785, Robert Burns uses jink as a verb to indicate both the quick motion of a fiddler's elbow and the sudden disappearance of a cheat around a corner. In the 20th century, the verb caught on with air force pilots and rugby players, who began using it to describe their elusive maneuvers to dodge opponents and enemies. Jink can also be used as a noun meaning "a quick evasive turn" or, in its plural form, "pranks." The latter use was likely influenced by the term high jinks, which originally referred in the late 17th century to a Scottish drinking game and later came to refer to horseplay. (merriam-webster.com)
• • •
If the long answers in the corners aren't particularly exciting, they are remarkably clean, I'll give them that. There's something to be said for that. Well, a space mission with an RRN (Random Roman Numeral) isn't that great, but the rest are all fine. No tortured phrases, no niche slang. The NW corner is probably the strongest of the lot, with a reasonably clever "?" clue on BABY SHOWER (1A: Coming out party?) over two rock-solid colloquialisms ("ANYONE HOME?," SINK OR SWIM). Outside of trivia ignorance, my trouble today came from either clue vagueness, clue badness, or perilous parsing adventures. Because I didn't have the "J" from JINK (ugh), I absolutely could not see JANE GREY. I should've remembered that she was monarch for a few days—I remember coming across and mentioning that fact on the blog just last years—but I didn't. Not only did I know have the "J" (JINK), I didn't have the "G" ("GLORY," bah!), and so both initials just weren't there for me. When I saw it ended in "Y," my immediate feeling wasn't "Oh, it's JANE GREY!" Instead, it was, "well, SAYS must be wrong—the monarch must end in a Roman numeral." So I pulled SAYS. Idiocy. I knew what 43A: Leading character on social media? was getting at instantly, but when AT SIGN wouldn't fit, I just ... blanked. I know that the answer should be AT SIGN because that is how it has appeared in the NYTXW ten times now (7 in singular, 3 in plural). Whereas this is just the second AT SYMBOL. Y'all should decide if it's a sign or a symbol and stick to it. Please.
No idea what FOREX is (51A: Market for currencies, informally). Sounds like a condom brand (it's actually short for "Foreign Exchange Market"). Thought FAUX was FAKE (39D: Like leatherette). Could not have known at that point that FAKE was already in play (with FAKE PLANTS). Honestly spent a few seconds wondering what a CART RAILER was before I mentally attached the "T" to "RAILER" to get TRAILER, ugh. Thought the Welsh "Ian" was EWAN (which looks a lot like EVAN, and looks kinda Welsh, frankly, but is actually a Scottish "Owen"). Cluing FLOTUS as [White House partner, for short] is ridiculous, since no one calls him "White House." FLOTUS's "partner" is POTUS. Like ... by definition. Those are the equivalents. I guess the idea is supposed to be "Partner (of the President) who resides in the White House." So not "partner of" but "partner in." Really awful, however you slice it. I was slow in the NE too, but mostly for good old-fashioned clue ambiguity. WAGES was vague/hard. WRAP was vague/hard (11A: Finish (up)). GAS CAN was vague/hard (24A: Trunk item). The "PET" part of PET SNAKES was not at all expected (14D: Some terrarium denizens). This was all frustrating, but it's the kind of frustrating I can live with. Friday-level frustrating. It's fine. I would love to give a thumbs-up to "LET'S ROCK" for originality and ... just ... colloquial vim, I guess, but I hate that expression. Sounds corny. I actually like "LET'S ROLL" a lot better. Anyway, sometimes an answer just nails-on-chalkboards you and there's no accounting for it. Not an objective fault of the puzzle. Just ... incompatibility.
Bullets:
That’s all. See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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Bullets:
- 19A: Classic 1926 poem associated with the Harlem Renaissance ("I, TOO") — longtime solvers will fill this in automatically. It has crosswordese status, for sure. I can imagine novice solvers being stumped by this one, especially crossing (as it does) two other proper nouns (ANITA, YOKO), as well as the startlingly hard-(for me)-to-parse BY NOW (3D: Already). Really really wanted one word there.
- 21A: Creatures that can turn into humans on land, in Scottish folklore (SEALS) — real Scottish puzzle today. Scotland in the EVAN clue. JINK is a "word" favored by Burns that first appears in Scottish English, and now ... Scottish wereseals. I have some vague memory of this bit of folklore from having watched John Sayles's The Secret of Roan Inish (1994). Yes, here we go: "It is centered on the Irish and Orcadian folklores of selkies—seals that can shed their skins to become human" (wikipedia). SELKIES would be a good grid word. Zero NYTXW appearances to date.
- 38A: Place for trading stories? (BOOK FAIR) — sigh, you don't "trade" stories at a BOOK FAIR. You do "trade" in stories, by selling them. Is that what was meant? Awkward.
- 54A: Hand count? (FIVE) — because we all have five hands. Science. Actually, you can plausibly interpret this clue two ways. First—and probably most likely—a single hand allows you to count to FIVE (five digits on each hand, barring table saw injuries). The second interpretation, which I only thought of just now, is that a typical poker "hand" has FIVE cards in it. So your "Hand count" would be FIVE—five cards in your hand. Did anyone read the clue as poker-related? I don't think it's the intended meaning, but it "works."
- 31D: Secret offering? (DEODORANT) — Secret is a brand. A brand of DEODORANT.
- 50D: Makes do for a while? (PERMS) — oof, real awkward. Makes (a hair)do (that lasts) for a while.
- 16A: Dialect featured in the literature of Alice Walker and Toni Morrison (AAVE) — African-American Vernacular English. It's been in the puzzle a few times now.
- 54D: Goal-oriented global org.? (FIFA) — aren't these the corrupt assholes who gave White House (which is apparently what we're calling him now) a completely made-up "Peace Prize"? Yep, the president of FIFA is apparently a close ally of White House. Meanwhile, White House continues to attack citizens of his own country with untrained incompetent sadistic goons who aren't fit for any other kind of employment. This week—flashbangs and tear gas thrown into a van filled with six children, one of whom required CPR. Giving White House a "peace prize" ... that really out-Orwells Orwell (you know, the guy who wrote ANIMAL FARM (59A: Novel whence the line "four legs good, two legs bad"))
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9 comments:
Yeah, this one was really hard. First DNF in a long long time, esp on a Friday. Got my gender bias going.... had "HIS" excellency, had "FLOTUS". Assuming that the men are in charge all the time. I even double checked and said "Yep, it was a male constructor." But then, when I had _ANEGREY, mentally ran the alphabet for that square, and didn't even try the J.... thought of DANE? ZANE? (zANE GREY is somebody, of course, so that messed me up for a long time. JINK didn't seem like it would be a thing.). The other spot that messed me up was that I said "I wonder if ERIK ends in K or c???? But then I confidently put in succulANTS for "green all year long" (even though now as I type it, I realize that's misspelled--it would be -eNTS on the end, and I knew FIFA already). Then when I figured out that F, I figured it must be FAcEPLANTS--Green people might faceplant, right???? Anyhoo.... oh well. googled the shortest reigning English monarch and.... got the music. Challenging from this rater, that's for sure.
Jink is not a thing but I’ll allow it, as the rest of the puzzle is as fine and, these days, rare example of a Friday grid as I can recall in the last few years. More please.
Rex had mostly bad things to say about this puzzle, but I found it reasonable. No cheats, and one alphabet run for the HERDINGCATS/ATSYMBOL cross. As a long-time cat owner I should have picked that up phrase more quickly. It was good to see a different clue for YOKO.
One history note: JANEGREY is usually identified as "Lady Jane Grey."
Geesh. I struggled and struggled in the NE to finish. I had GI SCAN as “Trunk item” and thought that was surely right. I was so sure, I couldn’t bring myself to admit that SAYS was right and spent several minutes ripping out SIYS and looking for a mistake in that instead!
I understand where you're coming from, but I'll take uninspired difficulty over the childish easiness of yesterday's puzzle any day of the week! Well, maybe not on Monday, but you know what I mean.
Isn't it funny how we each have different solving experiences? I wonder sometimes if it's just the day--like would I have gotten this on another day? Or is it a matter of wheelhouses? Congrats on completing this one, I found it challenging.
Rex wants his cake and all that - can’t have it both ways sometimes - this was a tough late week puzzle that was generally well filled. I agree that there is some flat stuff - that entire SW corner misses but the other three long stacks are solid - especially the NW.
Ian Tyson
HERDING CATS x SINK OR SWIM is the highlight. I liked the play with BOOK FAIRS. LETS ROCK is a little fratty and AT SYMBOL is awkward.
Sufjan
Saw a PBS show on JANE GREY so that was a gimme. No clue on FOREX - learned SEALS. Read a story recently that explained how Cynthia Lennon walked in on him and YOKO in bed one day and left him that day - never made a big scene about it or went public with it.
Snowball in Hell
Enjoyable Friday morning solve.
Shawn Colvin
I had to laugh that I considered ZANEGREY for a while, thinking the author might have borrowed his pen name from an English king.
Standouts for me:
• A new clue for YOKO, as in all Crosslandia's major outlets, it has always referred to Ms. Ono. A crossworthy clue as well. After reading about Yoko Ogawa, I’ve placed her on my want-to-read list.
• HERDING CATS! Hah! Incorrigibility, thy name is cat. It’s one of the reasons that every cat I’ve lived with has stolen my heart.
• A sky-high 18 longs, bringing fun and interest to the box.
• The NE corner, which stayed mostly white for me, even as I came back to it numerous times, and just before I uncle-d, an answer hit me. Then nada. Then again, just at breaking point, another answer. And again and again, a serious grind. How satisfying that was to fill in.
• PuzzPair©️: DUST, clued [Do some cleaning], and FAKE PLANTS. Is this not true?! Is this not true?!
Standout puzzle, Kyle, a splendid outing. Thank you!
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