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		Solving => Today's Puzzles => Topic started by: magus on August 05, 2015, 08:57:36 AM
		
			
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				THEME:   phrases containing the chemical symbol AU
 
 GOOD ONES:
 Kind nature {& theme}   HEART OF GOLD
 Stock quote?   MOO [cattle = stock]
 Where to find a horse with no legs?   SEA [as in seahorse --- glue factory didn't fit (sorry)]
 Promise from a shy person?   IOU [shy in the sense of owing money]
 Modern art?   ARE ["Wherefore art thou Romeo?"]
 Like no news?   GOOD ["no news is good news": certainly true on TV]
 Bean sprout?   IDEA [bean = head]
 
 BTW:
 Life altering words   I DO [come to think of it, there are zillion words and phrases that fit that definition, from "YES" and "NO" to "I'LL TRY IT" to "LET'S GO SWIMMING"]
 
 Spanish 101 verb   ESTA [and engripador is a noun --- so what?]
 
 Of all the ways to clue TIS, why quote John Donne I wonder.  Raise your hand the last time you read anything by John Donne --- or even seen his name in print.  If you're a fan of Old English kenning, you may enjoy "Lucy."
 
 
 RATING:    ;D ;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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				Mister magus, I appreciate you quoting the line ""Wherefore art thou Romeo?" Juliet was asking why he was named Romeo. Almost everyone thinks there is a comma after "thou" and nearly everyone thinks "wherefore" means "where." It does not. It means "Why." I often hear people on tv shows engage in such dialogue as: "Wherefore art thou, Romeo?" "I'm over here." That drives me crazy! Bobby Sherman and Gordon Lightfoot are among the artists who have recorded a song titled Wherefore & Why. That title, too, drives me crazy.
 
 Today's crossword included IDEA and NOIDEA. I think that idea-lly no word should appear twice in a puzzle unless it is part of a theme. (See what I did there?)
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				Yes, I saw what you did there, and it was ideal.  Less ideal is your failure to use the possessive case before a gerund ("... I appreciate you quoting...").  Now you've already been told about this --- don't make me tell you again!
			
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				I considered using "your" instead of "you" but I decided that my appreciation was directed more toward you than toward your act of quoting and to me that justified the use of the word "you." Remember, I learned grammar from a book titled How To Speak English Good. :).