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		Solving => Today's Puzzles => Topic started by: magus on June 13, 2015, 08:50:15 AM
		
			
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				THEME:   none, but crossed fifteens at center
 
 GOOD ONES:
 Kennel pick up area   NAPE [ clue is good and hard:  bitches pick up their pups by the back of the neck]
 Challenging pitch   HIGH C [I thought baseball]
 One hanging out in a coll. office?   PHD [is that the person or the degree hanging on the wall?]
 
 BTW:
 Reaction to excessive attention to detail   BUT WHO'S COUNTING   [tin earism:  "but who's counting" is an ironic statement wherein the speaker is noticing the number --- there is no suggestion of excess and is spoken less often as a reaction than as a comment engendered by the speaker himself]
 
 Like Zitronen   SAUER [this entry is a lemon --- and German]
 
 
 RATING: ;D ;D
 Three grins = Loved it; Two grins = Enjoyed it; One grin = A bit bland for my taste; One teardrop = Not much fun
 
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				I, too, though "Challenging pitch" would refer to a type of pitch thrown in a baseball game. I know very little about music. I'm much like comedian Junior Simples, who once said, "The only stringed instrument I can play is a yo-yo." But the "challenging pitch" was HIGHC. High C, also known as Top C, Soprano C and C6, is a musical note. In music, is a pitch the same as a note?  
 
 I thought that ZITRONEN, which is "sauer," might be a brand of bitter-tasting German liquor. It isn't. The word is the plural of "Zitrone," which means "lemon." Here is an explanation of why nouns in the German language are capitalized:
 
 http://german.about.com/library/weekly/aa020919a.htm
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				I believe note and pitch are different to musicians (connotation) but not to lexicographers (denotation).