Monday, March 16, 2026

Kicks down the road, as a decision / MON 3-16-26 / Stereotypical charmers / Hypothetical (one hopes!) global conflict, for short / After the event, as an analysis / Bronx-born congresswoman elected in 2018, familiarly / City that's home to the University of Maine

Constructor: Jamey Smith

Relative difficulty: Medium (solved Downs-only)

[⭐️ ⭐️ 1/2]

THEME: LATIN LOVERS (64A: Stereotypical charmers ... or those charmed by the answers to the starred clues?) — familiar Latin phrases

Theme answers:
  • AD INFINITUM (17A: *Forever)
  • SUI GENERIS (25A: *One of a kind)
  • MAGNUM OPUS (31A: *Masterwork)
  • POST MORTEM (46A: *After the event, as an analysis)
  • QUID PRO QUO (51A: *Reciprocal exchange)
["et cetera et cetera, AD INFINITUM, ad astra, forever, and ever..."]

Word of the Day:
 SUI GENERIS (25A) —

Sui generis is a Latin phrase that means "of its/their own kind" or "in a class by itself", therefore "unique". It denotes an exclusion to the larger system an object is in relation to.

Several disciplines use the term to refer to unique entities. These include:

  • Biology, for species that do not fit into a genus that includes other species (its own genus)
  • Creative arts, for artistic works that go beyond conventional genre boundaries (its own genre)
  • Law, when a special and unique interpretation of a case or authority is necessary (its own special case)
    • Intellectual property rights, for types of works not falling under general copyright law but protected through separate statutes
    • Laws of war, for types of actions that are argued to be legal due to exceptional circumstances in conflict
  • Philosophy, to indicate an idea, an entity, or a reality that cannot be reduced to a lower concept or included in a higher concept (its own category) (wikipedia)
• • •

[this cover gives me grad school flashbacks]

So it's a bunch of Latin phrases? That's it? Somehow LATIN LOVERS is not nearly enough to elevate this above the level of "mere random list." No "Love" content here at all. People who do not "love" Latin use these terms all the time. They're basic terms that have made their way into the English language. The least familiar of these is almost certainly SUI GENERIS, a term I sometimes use now but one that I don't think I really understood until way into adulthood. The others I've known since I was a child. On the whole, this feels conceptually uninspired. Plus the fill is pretty stale. I like PUNTS ON alright (not pretty, but colloquial and fresh-feeling to me), and GATE AGENT's OK I guess, but OBIT PAGES felt janky ("pages," plural? That's a lot of deaths ... and anyway, I think we just call them the "obituaries" or the "obits"), and beyond that, there's just a lot of crosswordese. Haven't seen OLLAS in a while. You know it's crosswordese when Spelling Bee is like "nope, not a word" (trust me, I've tried ... a lot). ORONO is another I'd know nothing about if it weren't for crosswords, particularly crosswords from the '90s. Ha, the data confirms it!: Mid-'90s! Peak ORONO! (34D: City that's home to the University of Maine)

[1997: 12 appearances—more than all ORONO appearances in the last decade combined]

TASER is always grim. Never happy to see it. But I'm way happier to see TASER than I am ****ing WWIII right now (7D: Hypothetical (one hopes!) global conflict, for short). "One hopes!" Yes, LOL, hilarious! Fingers crossed! Somehow this answer doesn't seem that funny to me right now, coming as it does in the middle of an undeclared war being waged by total incompetents who have the most powerful military on the planet but absolutely no strategy, no end game, no organized international support, and historically low support at home. What could go wrong?! Earlier today (Sunday), I went to see SIRAT, a harrowing, brutal, relentless movie that takes place against the backdrop of a very ill-defined and never directly-shown military conflict that feels a hell of a lot like WWIII. This is all to say that I was in no mood to appreciate the cutesiness of the WWIII clue. I guess actual WWIII remains "hypothetical," but pffffffft I dunno, man. It's all a little too plausible at the moment for me to be able to chuckle at it.


As usual, the longer answers were the trouble spots in my Downs-only solve. OBIT PAGES took a lot of inferred crosses. PUNTS ON was PUTS OFF at first (4D: Kicks down the road, as a decision). My [Italian cheese] was ASIAGO before it was ROMANO, and my [Rx writers] were DRS before they were MDS. Wasn't sure about the second vowel in "OVI-" (67D: Prefix meaning "egg"). Now that I write it out, "OVA-" does seem pretty unlikely, since OVA are the eggs themselves. OVO is Latin for "egg." It really could only have been OVI-. But still, I was cautious, and left the final letter blank until SISTER came along and confirmed the "I." Most dangerous error of the day was DUVET for QUILT (54D: Warm bed covering). One thing I will say about this theme—it really, really helped with the Downs-only solve. Once I got a couple of Latin phrases, I knew to go looking for them, and QUID PRO QUO ended up being a real lifesaver—one I probably wouldn't have been able to infer so easily if I hadn't understood the theme. 


Gonna go watch the Oscars now, I think, for as long as I can stay awake. Take care, everyone. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld 

P.S. my wife’s aunt Sandra died last week and so my wife (Penelope) is off to NZ today to attend the memorial near Auckland. She wrote a really moving remembrance of Sandra yesterday. You don’t have to know either of them to appreciate it. ❤️ 

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23 comments:

  1. Not hard, but well constructed. The Latin phrases are familiar, but require careful spelling (whether or not one is a LATINLOVER).

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

    1. Chicken noodle scoop (5)
    2. Sticks around for a demo? (3)
    3. Hurricane or mudslide (5)
    4. Tanning target (4)
    5. Noted series with over 200 Emmys ... and one Oscar (6)(6)


    LADLE
    TNT
    DRINK
    PELT
    SESAME STREET

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

      [Top guns?] (6)(7)
      [They croak as soon as they grow up] (9)


      TSHIRT CANNONS
      POLLIWOGS

      Delete
  3. Harmless early week puzzle. Cute theme - yup not overly nuanced but for for its lane. The revealer is fun - the themers are exactly what they are.

    link text">Screaming TREES

    OBIT PAGES and GATE AGENT are dismal - add the truly awful MOPER for more pizazz. Liked AVENGE, PUNTS ON, NEBULA and OLLAS. Learned some OPAL trivia. WACO will always be David Koresh.

    Alone in a crowd

    Enjoyable enough Monday morning solve. Rest in power Sandra.

    And when the flowers wilt
    A big old QUILT to keep us warm

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous6:45 AM

    I have a construction question: If an answer contains an abbreviation, doesn't the clue also contain one? It's a matching-up hint? 3D Obit ...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:28 AM

      If an answer contains an abbreviation, the clue ought to signal this. One way and, perhaps, the most common way - but not the only way - to signal is to use an abbreviation in the clue. However, in this case. OBIT is generally no longer considered to be an abbreviation of obituary, but, rather, to be a noun in itself used as an informal alternative to obituary. The informality and casualness of the clue ("locales for the late news") is what indicates the informality of the answer.

      At least, that's how I read it. But your mileage may vary!

      Delete
  5. Lovely echo to yesterday’s masterpiece: Jamey’s first NYT published puzzle happened on the Ides of March (the 15th), albeit seven years ago.

    I never thought about it, but I guess I am a lover of Latin phrases from the simple de facto, status quo, and ad hoc, to the lengthier sine qua non, ad hominem, and deus ex machina. So, this theme gave me pleasure.

    I liked the play on LATIN LOVERS too.

    It’s a quirky theme – Latin phrases. The theme of Jamey’s last puzzle (3/29/22) was quirky as well – metonyms. I, a fan of quirky, loved this aspect of both.

    Finally, I like how the puzzle didn’t autofill as Mondays sometimes can, that is, my brain experienced some carpe diem and cogito ergo sum.

    Thus, a fun an engaging spark to the week. Thank you for this, Jamey!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Condolences to you, your wife, and the rest of the family.

    Another list puzzle! We seem to be getting a lot of these lately, which I am 100% OK with but I thought was out of fashion at NYTXW.

    I occasionally lead plant walks focusing on the scientific names called Becoming a Latin Lover (although it is a misleading title in two ways).

    ReplyDelete
  7. It’s a little strange that Rex just solves it downs only and then trashes the theme. Personally, I don’t trash the themes so much, per se (is that derived from Latin? - anyway, I digress) - I don’t so much trash the themes, but I do think that the requirement to have a theme 5 days a week does detract from the quality of the puzzles.

    This one had a few knuckleballs floating around for a Monday - such as ORONO, WACO, NEBULA and OLLAS. At the end of the day, we had fair crosses, a beginner-friendly grid and no Star Wars crap, so a successful Monday.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Andy Freude7:39 AM

    I started solving crossword puzzles in the mid 1990s. That’s probably why, when I first visited ORONO years later, I felt I was in crossword Mecca. Looked in a kitchenware store, but they were all out of OLLAS.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Hey All !
    Agree that these LATIN phrases are common, which is good, as LATIN is like a foreign language. 😁

    A six-Themer/Revealer puz. Nice. You know I like a lot of Theme. The fill not too shabby with having to navigate around all of them.

    Interpreted the WWIII clue wrong at first, was thinking the parenthicized 'one hopes!' meant that it was hoping for a conflict. The wording is off to my ear.

    Good MonPuz, not AGOG about it, but still plenty to like.

    Have a great Monday!

    Two F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  10. Downs only. DNF due to AVENUE vs. AVENGE

    ReplyDelete
  11. Lánzame la pelota -- nadie me está mirando.

    Thanks for sharing Penelope's remembrance of Sandra.

    Great puzzle and excellent way to begin the week. Solid fill throughout except for a surprisingly imbalanced number of partials throwing the gunk gauge into a bit of a meltdown.

    Kind of rude (and I am told I am an expert on rudeness {insert curtsy here}) that the funniest thing in the puzzle is OBIT PAGES. I guess they could be the best kind of late news if you read them with an Austin Powers accent. If they died from multiple stab wounds I guess they would be groovy baby. Or left a large estate it'd be like one meeellion dollars.

    I finished this puzzle as a MOPER being forced to endure the Oscars (my wife likes them) and having seen exactly one movie this year. Hamnet was pretty good. The actress won the award. Then right afterward, they were going to run The Bachelorette, but we turned it off being allegedly too sophisticated for such shinanigans, and I'm writing about this puzzle instead of rooting for her to find love. There's my POST MORTEM and a reasonably solid explanation why I'd rather watch old sit-coms.

    I generally don't count theme material as gunk, so the Latin phrases are freebies today. Sorry to the LATIN HATERS.

    People: 2
    Places: 3
    Products: 1
    Partials: 12 {yech}
    Foreignisms: 2
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 20 of 78 (26%)

    Funny Factor: 2 😕

    Tee-Hee: WEE PEEN. Or, PEEN WEE I suppose.

    Uniclues:

    1 Right square in the middle of righty angst.
    2 "I told you I was sick," or "Sheesk it's dark down here."
    3 Goes for the fro.
    4 And that's how Legolas survived being kicked in the you know where during the Rivendell soccer tournament.
    5 One saying, "Ah, what's the big hurry to get to Albuquerque anyway."

    1 AOC SPOT
    2 OBIT PAGES IDIOM
    3 PUNTS ON UPDO
    4 ELF CUP EPILOG
    5 BAD PR GATE AGENT

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Abominable snowmen suspect surprise arson attack. YETIS SENSE SLY FIRES.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous8:00 AM

    I had the same Latin book at SUNY-Binghamton in the 1980s for my word origins class!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Not my favorite puzzle but I sure didn’t hate it as much as Rex did. Is this the first Zero Star puzzle since Rex started his star-rating system? Seems a little harsh. I got most of it Down Only but then gave in and looked at some across clues. Maybe I was just impatient.

    Condolences to your wife and family.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Anonymous8:06 AM

    Had a funny downs only error. Went with OVA for 67D, so for 73A had _ASTER which has to be EASTER. That made the plural OLLAE. Well, I thought, that goes with the Latin theme, but seems rough for a Monday.

    ReplyDelete
  15. MaxxPuzz8:16 AM

    Speaking of Spelling Bee, what they accept or do not accept is so arbitrary! ILIAC but not ILIA, no OLLAS allowed, but OLIO OK, many perfectly good medical terms either kosher or not. Most exasperating today was getting the nix on EXIGENCE! At east it did take NIXING. ;-)

    ReplyDelete
  16. Anonymous8:28 AM

    You all may be interested in watching the latest episode of Elsbeth. Too bad they didn’t think to include a role for Rex

    ReplyDelete
  17. And the boys from the casino dance with their shirts open like LATIN LOVERS on the shore
    Chasing all them silly New York virgins by the score.

    B. Springsteen

    My wife complains that I hog the comforter at night: a blanket accusation! She says my excuses are all cover stories. I went to the rabbi for advice. He said it's a question of QUILT or innocence. Not every marriage is a bed of roses. He's going to sleep on it and get back to me.

    Dad -- what should I do on fourth and long? PUNTSON

    AD INFINITUM: A commercial that seems to go on forever

    Our neighbor brought over a large container of home-made Chinese food and refused to take a penny for it. He was Chop SUEY GENEROUS.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Did anyone fill in "here go" for 1 across? When I was young and you wanted someone to throw you the ball, you said "here go". And it fit the space.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:53 AM

      Never heard that in my life. Maybe it was a local thing?

      Delete
  19. Anonymous8:50 AM

    Given what's going on and an OpEd in today's NYT about the coming economic collapse, the last thing I needed was WW111 as an answer. Depressing.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Anonymous9:05 AM

    The Latin theme was fine.But the Monday fill seemed off to me. No 🎈for me today.

    ReplyDelete