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JUMBLAYA

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July 10, 2004, 21:52
MPen
JUMBLAYA
OH BREEZY LIP

hyperbolize

I must admit tense moments with that one!

And since everyone here seems to be limerick mad:

{b]CONCISE VERSE[/b]
July 10, 2004, 21:53
MPen
Sorry, that would be:

CONCISE VERSE
July 11, 2004, 18:37
Kalleh
coerciveness

So, you're from one of my favorite states...Utah! I love the mountains.

I thought "hyperbolize" might be hard, but then I also know the kind of people I'm dealing with! Wink

Ah! Tea req. U.K.

BTW, MPen, we have decided that unless we note otherwise, it is always 1 word. I just got confused with "grease monkey."
July 11, 2004, 21:01
KHC
Ah! Tea req. U.K.

Yes, Kalleh, we will all drink tea in London. Great anagram!

Earthquake --------------- rumble, rumble.

Tee us, dude! The foursome is ready to play golf.
July 12, 2004, 04:05
haberdasher
desuetude, a nice self-descriptive word, meaning "having fallen into disuse" (or, the state of having had the food removed from your bird feeder? or was that the fancy leather from your blue shoes?)

CALLIGO - a cat with a stuffy nose
July 12, 2004, 09:25
arnie
CALLIGO

Logical

ORC SWORDS -- one of these often includes an anagram


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
July 12, 2004, 12:27
haberdasher
Did you know that the National Puzzlers' League annual convention just concluded in Cambridge, MA? Will Shortz (crossword puzzle editor of the NYTimes, among his other accomplishments) is the president.

MAGYC R SPORT
July 12, 2004, 20:30
KHC
MAGYC R SPORT

cryptograms... messages from the grave?


TARTAN CLERIC...Does the minister wear a kilt?
July 13, 2004, 05:03
haberdasher
TARTAN CLERIC

recalcitrant - does that really mean hard and unyielding, like a stone?

ELECTRIRIAN
July 13, 2004, 19:54
KHC
ELECTRIRIAN

rectilinear.... I'm straight! I'm straight! Smile

ELASTIC CHINS - one word
July 15, 2004, 10:21
haberdasher
ELASTIC CHINS

I think I'm leading myself down the garden path, but not getting any closer to where I should be going...

NOT A LIMERICK

There's CHALICES TINS
And there's CHILIASTS NEC
Also -ANCES and -ISTICS galore
And there's L I CATCHINESS ("Long Island", to non-New-Yorkers)
ITCHINESS, LAC (if you're alleric to lac, that is)
But I can't think of anything more!


(and lots of other enticing beginnings, but I'm not getting anywhere yet)

This message has been edited. Last edited by: haberdasher,
July 15, 2004, 10:34
KHC
Hab,
Take yourself to the gymnasium and do some jumping jacks... see if that helps you think.
Big Grin
July 15, 2004, 10:42
arnie
ELASTIC CHINS

Aha! Calisthenics! Nice one!

TITIAN'S COMA (One word, no apostrophe)


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
July 15, 2004, 14:44
haberdasher
TITIAN'S COMA

Thought of CONCOMITANTS and MACHINATIONS but they have too many letters.
Then after chewing on it for a while I see it's MASTICATION!

How 'bout C-CHORALE, the stuttering singers? (Well, it's better than "CHE CAROL," which is what old Cuban revolutionaries sing at Christmas) [Not to be confused with the "O CHE C'RAL" where they had that big gunfight]
July 15, 2004, 19:46
KHC
C-CHORALE

What singing? I hear nothing...

Cochlear - 'ear that??

STONEY UTENSIL
July 15, 2004, 20:47
jo
STONEY UTENSIL

lousy sentient?

I don't think so... argh it's too late.
July 16, 2004, 01:24
arnie
STONEY UTENSIL

Sententiously

Go to the Xerox to get the USUAL COPYING done in a quarrelsome manner.


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
July 16, 2004, 06:45
KHC
USUAL COPYING

That's great, Arnie - Pow!Pow! They pugnaciously met at the Xerox.

SOUP OUT, LUV! - one word
July 16, 2004, 12:12
jo
SOUP OUT LUV!

Eat it often enough, out or at home, and you become Voluptuous.

ITALICS OUT, NOT! You can publish in any form you want. (one word)
July 16, 2004, 18:36
haberdasher
ITALICS OUT, NOT plus N is

CONSTITUTIONAL

but as it stands it's "non-constitutional"! (that is to say, no "n")

(Jo, I like your picture!)
July 16, 2004, 20:04
jo
ARGGGGGGGGGG

I'm so sorry. You are absolutely right.
July 16, 2004, 20:33
KHC
Here's a new word to un-scramble, since you both have left me wordless..Big Grin

nimble retina... one word. Keen eyesight.
July 17, 2004, 06:38
haberdasher
nibmle retina - interminable


CHORIOPESENT
July 17, 2004, 16:29
jo
CHORIOPESENT

I know that none of these are the answer, but they are so much fun.

From the English major comes: poetic shores, with a tip of the hat to everyone who has ever written rhymes to those Dover Cliffs.

A tip of the hat to Michael Moore: Epic Shooter

And to the low brow playboys amongst us: Epic Hooters
July 17, 2004, 20:12
KHC
CHORIOPESENT

Stereophonic... reminds me of HiFi's and 45 rpm records.. Geez, I'm old.

CHUTE BRATS.... Send all the misbehavin' off the planeBig Grin
July 18, 2004, 08:48
haberdasher
still working on CHUTE BRATS but here are some loose associations so far:

Buttersach - some kind of German pastry?
Bucherstat - speaking of German, tell me about all those books...
Brust cheat - went to Berlin for augmentation surgery
chat buster - flame war
beach strut - "Notice me!" for teenagers
such a Brett - all you American football fans
stretch Abu - Aladdin's little monkey just woke up
starch tube
ratchet bus

You're right, jo, these are half the fun!

This message has been edited. Last edited by: haberdasher,
July 18, 2004, 10:41
jo
CHUTE BRATS

I admit defeat. I've spent way tooooo much of my Sunday on this one, with about four pages filled with various permutations. I can hardly wait to find out what it really is.

I came up with:

sub chatter -- watch out for those depth charges

cab shutter -- a doorman's work is never done

cub hatter -- Hey! A fan's got to have the right head gear.

butt arches -- no comment
July 18, 2004, 12:00
haberdasher
PROGRESS BUT NO SUCCESS report

TREBUCHETS is within one letter of CHUTE BRATS - drop that first E, put an A in its place.

The trebuchet was a medieval catapult, capable of hurling heavy boulders long distances and knocking down fortified battlements, or stone castles, or what have you.

Unfortunaltely there isn't "trabuchet" to be made plural that I know of.

Sigh.
July 18, 2004, 14:14
KHC
All of your "silly scrambles" (daffy-nitions?) are very witty...

Think Italy! Think food! Big Grin
July 18, 2004, 15:24
haberdasher
Well, if you say it's an Italian food I'll make the letters into a compatible configuration BRUSCHETTA but it's the first time I've encountered the word.

I think you deserve to post the next one too, as I didn't Solve this, really Smile

This message has been edited. Last edited by: haberdasher,
July 18, 2004, 15:36
haberdasher
Please don't; we'll just work on yours, with gusto.

"mid-brain CE," eh?

I see my post needs some mighty clearing-up, too.
July 18, 2004, 15:45
haberdasher
There. Done.

After all, jo, I didn't figure it out it, I made it up a plausible answer that just happened to be correct. You solved the puzzle.
July 18, 2004, 21:31
KHC
Hab and Jo,

I'm lost amongst the 3 blind mice... and sorry that Hab has never eaten bruschetta... I'm lucky to have Italian neighbors.. Since I don't see another word out there to scramble, I offer:

ALPHA RAIN PEAR... the best pear on the tree after a summer shower
July 19, 2004, 02:19
arnie
ALPHA RAIN PEAR

Paraphernalia

AUDIBLE PINTS -- Slurping your drink? -- without argument!


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
July 19, 2004, 03:41
jo
ohhhhhhhhhhkay then. I deleted my post. Thanks for letting me play. thought I had a puzzle there after solving bruschetta. Guess I wasn't supposed to play.

Thanks.
July 19, 2004, 05:01
haberdasher
Sure you were, jo. INDISPUTABLE-y.

My "midbrain CE" was an inaccurate rendition of your letters, which I think were

I BRAND MICE (if I can hold 'em down)

or something reasonably close.

And which remains unsolved...

This message has been edited. Last edited by: haberdasher,
July 19, 2004, 07:56
haberdasher
I BRAND MICE

am bride inc (weddings arranged for a fee)
anemic bird (Polly-want-a-transfusion)
bind Crimea (start a war)
birim dance (Chasidic celebration)
camenbiird (orthographically challenged French cheese)
July 19, 2004, 20:46
KHC
I BRAND MICE

brain medic - I could certainly use one!

iceman bird - Nordic version of Superman.

rabid mince - a dog frothing over the Christmas pies.
July 20, 2004, 06:10
arnie
I'm lost here. Confused

Why did you delete a post, jo?

I BRAND MICE = MANIC BRIDE - not unlikely!
or perhaps = IAMBIC NERD (that could describe many of us.)


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
July 20, 2004, 06:25
jo
Good Morning!

Arnie, I originally deleted because I thought that Hab was saying since we required a clue to solve that it wasn't really a "true" solve. So my bad... sorry.

As for I BRAND MICE -- well, I rather like Iambic Nerd. Big Grin That's a truly nifty one. However, the chemistry is all wrong. (that's a clue...) I must admit this is not at all a common word. In fact, it is uncommon enough that I am quite willing to allow Iambic Nerd as the solution if others agree that it is entirely appropriate here. If I don't hear any disagreements by noon or so, I will declare Arnie the winner and let you know what word I had in mind.
July 20, 2004, 08:05
haberdasher
No, no, give me a little more time to work on it! Chemistry, eh?
July 20, 2004, 11:44
haberdasher
OK, so as not to prolong it _too_ much.

There's CARBIMINED, which would conceivably mean "added a carbimino- group." (Or did you mean the chemist who dispenses medications from a shop?)

And on a more whimsical note, there's MID-CARBINE, meaning halfway between the ends of your rifle.

Somehow I have the feeling that your word is neither of these... :-)

PS: "iambic nerd" is an iambic pair. (Which is itself iambic pentad, too)
July 20, 2004, 12:30
jo
carbimined it is.
July 20, 2004, 12:49
haberdasher
carbimined it is

It is really?! It was offered more in the spirit of a collection of well-formed plausible-sounding syllables that fit the context of the hint. Just like "bruschetta"!

Anyway.

GOONSMILE (That's a new word I just made up.)

This message has been edited. Last edited by: haberdasher,
July 20, 2004, 19:43
KHC
GOONSMILE


(I guess the goon squad can be happy every now and then..)

However, Hab is creating a NEOLOGISM with his new word.
That was great, Hat Man.

SOAPY PLACE - one word
July 21, 2004, 01:25
arnie
SOAPY PLACE

Apocalypse

NYLON CACTUS


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
July 21, 2004, 17:01
Kalleh
consultancy

Tommy Yen
July 21, 2004, 17:51
haberdasher
Looks like it's trying to be ETYMONYM, but I'll have to look it up to see if it's really a word. For the moment it's another collection of well-formed prefixes and suffixes that looks word-like. Should have to do with word names...
July 21, 2004, 17:55
haberdasher
And Onelook.com says...

"Sorry, no dictionaries indexed in the selected category contain the word ETYMONYM".

Oh well. It sounded like a word, anyway.
July 21, 2004, 18:00
haberdasher
...but there _is_ METONYMY, now that you make me think, though I don't recall what particular figure of speech it is. The opposite of hyperbole, maybe, emphasis by understatement?