Fearsome, swift-moving creature with snapping jaws / THU 4-8-10 / Caelestes divine wrath / Grass plot around sundial / Old-time floozie
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Constructor: Matt Ginsberg
Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging
THEME: "Jabberwocky" — seven answers are "words" in "Jabberwocky," a poem from "Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There" by LEWIS CARROLL (44A: Writer who was the source of all the words with asterisked clues in this puzzle)
Word of the Day: LINEAR A (14A: Form of writing of ancient Crete) —
Linear A is one of two linear and possibly syllabic scripts used in ancient Crete before Mycenaean Greek Linear B. In Minoan times, before the Mycenaean Greek dominion, Linear A was the official script for the palaces and cults and Cretan Hieroglyphs were mainly used on seals. These three scripts were discovered and named by Arthur Evans. In 1952, Michael Ventris discovered that Linear B was being used to write the early form of Greek now known as Mycenaean. He and others used this information to achieve a significant and now well accepted decipherment of the script, although many points remain to be elucidated. A failure to discover the language of Linear A has prevented the same sort of progress being made in its decipherment. (wikipedia)
• • •
Well this one is sure to divide people. Or so I'd imagine. If you know "Jabberwocky," then sure, why not — this is lively and by all means original. Nothing says "original" like completely made-up words.

MYSORE (38A: Indian tourist city) is possibly the worst-named city in the history of the world. So high on getting LAHORE straight off (5D: Pakistan's so-called "Garden of Mughals"). So sad at completely bombing with this second ORE.
Theme answers:
1A: *4:00 in the afternoon (BRILLIG)
- 8A: *To make holes (GIMBLE)
- 19A: *To go round and round (GYRE)
- 24A: *Fearsome, swift-moving creature with snapping jaws (BANDERSNATCH)
- 52A: *Grass plot around a sundial (WABE)
- 64A: *Lithe and slimy (SLITHY)
- 65A: *Smiling radiantly (BEAMISH)

Bullets:
35A: Emulate the dodo (DIE OUT) — "Emulate" implies intention, making this clue ... odd.
- 47A: Wonderland food for Alice (CAKE) — little bonus theme answer, along with MAD (10D: ___ Hatter) and possibly other things I'm not noticing. Like CRY (29D: "Curiouser and curiouser!," e.g.)
- 59A: Some buffalo hunters of old (ARAPAHO) — helped me change AUDIO to AURAL (48D: Not visual)
- 46D: Objects employed to show everyday life (REALIA) — I made up a word that sounded like it might be right, and it was. I cannot imagine what REALIA are or look like. Looks like they are just everyday objects used as aids to comprehension in educational settings. Because "everyday objects" was too clunky.
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