Constructed by: Brad Lively
Edited by: Will Shortz
Not your puzzle? Try today’s …
… syndicated NY Times crossword
Today’s Reveal Answer: Body of Knowledge
Themed answers each comprise two words, the first describing KNOWLEDGE and the second being a BODY part:
- 37A What the answers to the starred clues are, collectively? : BODY OF KNOWLEDGE
- 17A *Aids for biting : SHARP TEETH
- 26A *Attribute for spotting what others miss : KEEN EYE
- 49A *Cheeky sort : WISEASS
- 63A *One given to insolence : SMART MOUTH
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Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
9A Bryce Canyon’s state : UTAH
Bryce Canyon National Park is a beautiful part of America. The strange thing is that Bryce isn’t a canyon at all, but rather is a natural amphitheater created by erosion of sedimentary rocks that are part of the Paunsaugunt Plateau.
14A Cookies featured in Weird Al’s “The White Stuff” : OREOS
“The White Stuff” is a 1992 song released by Weird Al Yankovic that parodies “You Got It (The Right Stuff)”, a 1988 single from New Kids on the Block.
16A Condiment in potato salad, informally : MAYO
Mayonnaise originated in the town of Mahon in Menorca, a Mediterranean island belonging to Spain. The Spanish called the sauce “salsa mahonesa” after the town, and this morphed into the French word “mayonnaise” that we use in English today.
24A Ice cream drink : MALT
Walgreens claims to have introduced the malted milkshake, back in 1922.
31A Word after hand or band : SAW
A bandsaw has a blade that forms a “band”, a continuous loop that rotates around a pair of wheels positioned one above the other.
34A Actress de Armas of “Knives Out” : ANA
Ana de Armas is an actress from Cuba. Having attended the National Theater School of Cuba, she moved to Spain at the age of 18. There, she made a name for herself in a Spanish TV series called “El Internado”. De Armas moved to Los Angeles in 2014, after which her performance opposite Ryan Gosling in 2017’s “Blade Runner 2049” earned her critical acclaim.
“Knives Out” is an intriguing murder mystery film released in 2019. There’s a great cast including Daniel Craig, Jamie Lee Curtis, Toni Collette and Christopher Plummer. I really enjoyed this one, partly because it’s a clever, contemporary take on a classic whodunit movie …
36A Copenhagener, e.g. : DANE
Copenhagen is the largest city and the capital of Denmark. I haven’t had the privilege of visiting Copenhagen, but I hear it is a wonderful metropolis with a marvelous quality of life. The city is also very environmentally friendly, with over a third of its population commuting to work by bicycle.
43A Cuisine from Bangkok : THAI
Bangkok is the capital city of Thailand. The exact etymology of the name “Bangkok” seems unclear, although “bang” is a Thai word for “a village situated on a stream”.
45A Artist with the albums “19,” “21,” “25” and “30” : ADELE
“Adele” is the stage name of English singer Adele Adkins. Adele’s debut album is “19”, named after the age she was during the album’s production. Her second album was even more successful than the first. Called “21”, the second album was released three years after the first, when Adele was three years older. Her third studio album “25”, released in 2015, broke the first-week sales records in both the UK and the US. “30” followed in 2021.
48A Online files for instruction manuals, often : PDFS
Portable Document Format (PDF) is a file format introduced by Adobe Systems in 1993. PDF documents can be shared between users and read using many different applications and platforms, making them more universally accessible than documents saved by one particular program.
65A Tickle Me Elmo toymaker : TYCO
The Tickle Me Elmo toy was a sensational fad in the late nineties, with stores raising prices dramatically above the recommended retail price to take advantage of demand. Reportedly, prices as high as $1500 were paid at the height of the craze. The toy’s manufacturer, Tyco, originally planned to market the “tickle” toy as Tickle Me Tasmanian Devil (after the “Looney Tunes” character), but then went with “Elmo” after they bought the rights to use “Sesame Street” names.
66A HR-V and CR-V automaker : HONDA
The Japanese auto manufacturer Honda was founded in 1946 as the Honda Technical Research Institute by Soichiro Honda. The company’s first products were improvised motorized bicycles that used 50cc, two-stroke engines that were originally built to power radios during the war.
67A Senior dance party : PROM
A prom is a formal dance held upon graduation from high school (we call them “formals” over in Ireland). The term “prom” is short for “promenade”, the name given to a type of dance or ball.
68A Meyers of “Late Night” : SETH
Seth Meyers is an actor and comedian who is perhaps best-known today for hosting his own late night talk show on NBC. Meyers might be described as a poker shark. He won the third season of Celebrity Poker Showdown in 2004.
Down
1D Gusto : ZEST
“Gusto” is an Italian word meaning “taste”. We use it in English in the phrase “with gusto” meaning “with great enjoyment”.
7D “Finding Nemo” setting : REEF
“Finding Nemo” is a 2003 animated blockbuster from Pixar. The film was the winner of the Oscar that year for Best Animated Feature. Believe it or not, “Finding Nemo” is the best-selling DVD of all time. It was also the highest-grossing G-rated movie until 2010’s “Toy Story 3”.
9D M.L.B. official : UMP
Back in the 15th century, “an umpire” was referred to as “a noumpere”, which was misheard, and hence caused the dropping of the initial letter N. The term “noumpere” came from Old French “nonper” meaning “not even, odd number”. The idea was that the original umpire was a third person called on to arbitrate between two, providing that the “odd number” needed to decide the dispute.
12D Moved like a kangaroo : HOPPED
The word “kangaroo” comes from the Australian Aborigine term for the animal. There’s an oft-quoted story that the explorer James Cook (later Captain Cook) asked a local native what was the name of this remarkable-looking animal, and the native responded with “Kangaroo”. The story is that the native was actually saying “I don’t understand you”, but as cute as that tale is, it’s just an urban myth.
22D Mountain visible from Anchorage : DENALI
“Denali” means “the high one” in the native Koyukon Athabaskan language, and is the name used for the peak formerly known as Mount McKinley. Denali’s summit stands at 20,310 feet, making it the highest mountain peak in North America. I was surprised to learn that there is a Denali State Park, as well as the Denali National Park. The two are located adjacent to each other (which makes sense!). The State Park is undeveloped for all practical purposes, with just a few campgrounds and trailheads.
29D Game with the goal of running out of cards : UNO
UNO is a card game that was developed in the early seventies and that has been sold by Mattel since 1992. It falls into the shedding family of card games, meaning that the goal is to get rid of all your cards while preventing opponents from doing the same.
30D Huge props : MAD RESPECT
“Props” is North American slang for “proper respect”.
38D Connecticut Ivy : YALE
The term “Ivy League” originally defined an athletic conference, but now it is used to describe a group of schools of higher education that are associated with both a long tradition and academic excellence. The eight Ivy League Schools are: Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, the University of Pennsylvania, and Yale.
39D Home of Xenia, the U.S.’s largest city whose name starts with “X” : OHIO
Xenia, Ohio is in effect a suburb of Dayton. The name “Xenia” is the Greek word for “hospitality”. In terms of population, Xenia is the largest city in the US with a name beginning with the letter X.
40D Many an embedded animation : GIF
The Graphics Interchange Format (GIF) is an image format developed in the 1980s by CompuServe (remember CompuServe?). GIF images are compressed, reducing the file size, but without losing information. So, the original image can be reconstructed perfectly from the compressed GIF version. But, and it’s a big but, GIF images use only 256 individual colors. This means that GIF is a relatively poor choice of compression for color photographs, while it is usually fine for logos with large blocks of single colors.
41D Settings for “The Pitt” and “Code Black,” for short : ERS
“The Pitt” is a medical drama TV show that premiered in 2025. The title refers to the fictional Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center. In each episode, we follow the staff through an hour in the emergency department, navigating challenges like staff shortages and underfunding. The show has been praised by the medical community for its realistic portrayal of healthcare workers and the psychological challenges faced in a post-pandemic world.
48D Military mind games, for short : PSY-OPS
Psychological Operations (“PSYOP” or “psy-ops”) is a contemporary name for propaganda, the “winning of hearts and minds” in a combat zone.
51D Schuster’s partner in publishing : SIMON
Publishing house of Simon & Schuster is one of the “Big Five” publishers in the English language, alongside Penguin Random House, Hachette, Macmillan and HarperCollins. Simon & Schuster started out as a publisher of books of crosswords, would you believe? Richard Simon was asked by his aunt if he knew of any book of crosswords, and as there weren’t any Simon decided to launch a little publishing business with Max Schuster, exploiting a gap in the publishing market. The first book of crosswords was published in 1924, and they’ve been going ever since. And another bit of trivia is that the same Richard Simon was the father of singer-songwriter Carly Simon.
60D Electrical resistance units : OHMS
The unit of electrical resistance is the ohm (with the symbol omega) named after German physicist Georg Simon Ohm. Ohm was the guy who established experimentally that the amount of current flowing through a circuit is directly proportional to the voltage applied (V=IR), a relationship that every school kid knows as Ohm’s Law.
62D [Facepalm] : D’OH
A facepalm is the gesture made by lowering one’s face into the palm of one’s hand or hands. It can be an expression of surprise, frustration or embarrassment. A related gesture with a similar meaning is the headdesk, the gentle striking of the forehead against a desk or a wall perhaps.
64D Nutritional intake amt. : RDA
Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA)
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1A Number not representable by Roman numerals : ZERO
5A What’s the point of bullfighting? : HORN
9A Bryce Canyon’s state : UTAH
13A What Thomas Carlyle called “the dismal science,” for short : ECON
14A Cookies featured in Weird Al’s “The White Stuff” : OREOS
16A Condiment in potato salad, informally : MAYO
17A *Aids for biting : SHARP TEETH
19A Task for a line cook, informally : PREP
20A Thus far : TO DATE
21A ___ for thought : FOOD
23A Crevice : GAP
24A Ice cream drink : MALT
26A *Attribute for spotting what others miss : KEEN EYE
28A What a scare might make you do : JUMP
31A Word after hand or band : SAW
33A “That’s a good tip for the future” : NOTED
34A Actress de Armas of “Knives Out” : ANA
35A Swanky shindig : GALA
36A Copenhagener, e.g. : DANE
37A What the answers to the starred clues are, collectively? : BODY OF KNOWLEDGE
42A $50/hour, e.g. : RATE
43A Cuisine from Bangkok : THAI
44A It’s blowing in the wind : AIR
45A Artist with the albums “19,” “21,” “25” and “30” : ADELE
47A “My dear ___ …” : SIR
48A Online files for instruction manuals, often : PDFS
49A *Cheeky sort : WISEASS
52A Rip-___ (awful deals) : OFFS
54A Pre-entree order, informally : APP
55A Daily delivery : MAIL
57A Declares as fact : SAYS SO
61A Picked out of a lineup, informally : IDED
63A *One given to insolence : SMART MOUTH
65A Tickle Me Elmo toymaker : TYCO
66A HR-V and CR-V automaker : HONDA
67A Senior dance party : PROM
68A Meyers of “Late Night” : SETH
69A Within a stone’s throw of : NEAR
70A Patches up, say : SEWS
Down
1D Gusto : ZEST
2D Repetitive sound effect : ECHO
3D Highway, e.g. : ROAD
4D Way to the highway : ON-RAMP
5D Spot to keep a passport while traveling : HOTEL SAFE
6D Valuable deposit : ORE
7D “Finding Nemo” setting : REEF
8D Simply unacceptable : NOT OK
9D M.L.B. official : UMP
10D Customized bit of marketing : TARGETED AD
11D “Yes, captain!” : AYE AYE!
12D Moved like a kangaroo : HOPPED
15D “If the ___ fits, wear it!” : SHOE
18D School bake sale org. : PTA
22D Mountain visible from Anchorage : DENALI
25D Lecture : TALK
27D “___ of your business!” : NONE
28D Punch in the ring : JAB
29D Game with the goal of running out of cards : UNO
30D Huge props : MAD RESPECT
32D Desires : WANTS
35D Cheerleader’s shout : GO TEAM!
36D A little sun? : DWARF STAR
38D Connecticut Ivy : YALE
39D Home of Xenia, the U.S.’s largest city whose name starts with “X” : OHIO
40D Many an embedded animation : GIF
41D Settings for “The Pitt” and “Code Black,” for short : ERS
45D Lies ahead : AWAITS
46D Technique whereby a shirt is lowered into a pigmented bath : DIP-DYE
48D Military mind games, for short : PSY-OPS
50D Merit badge holder : SASH
51D Schuster’s partner in publishing : SIMON
53D Closest peeps : FAM
56D Assignment at a bowling alley : LANE
58D “You bet!” : SURE!
59D Place in an overhead bin : STOW
60D Electrical resistance units : OHMS
62D [Facepalm] : D’OH
64D Nutritional intake amt. : RDA
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