Constructed by: John-Clark Levin
Edited by: Will Shortz
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Google Assistant is a virtual assistant that can engage in two-way conversation. Google Assistant competes with Microsoft’s Cortana, Amazon’s Alexa and Apple’s Siri.
“Lorde” is a stage name of the singer-songwriter Ella Yelich-O’Connor from New Zealand. Lorde’s cover version of the great Tears for Fears song “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” was used in the soundtrack for “The Hunger Games: Catching Fire” (2013). Her song “Yellow Flicker Beat” is included in the soundtrack for “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1”. “Lana Del Rey” is the stage name of singer/songwriter Elizabeth Grant. Del Rey calls herself a “self-styled gangsta Nancy Sinatra”. Nice …
“Bailiwick” is a word dating back to the mid-1600s. The term originally meant “district of a bailiff”.
“Parole” is a French word that we use in English, with the French “parole” meaning “word, speech”. Of particular interest is the French phrase “parole d’honneur” which translates as “word of honor”. In the early 1600s we started using “parole” to mean a promise by a prisoner of war not to escape, as in the prisoner giving his “word of honor” not to run off. Over time, parole has come to mean conditional release of a prisoner before he or she has served the full term of a sentence.
Hyperbole is the use of exaggerated speech. The term “hyperbole” is Greek, coming from “hyper-” meaning “beyond” and “bole” meaning “a throwing”. When using hyperbole, our choice of words is “thrown beyond” what is normally necessary to get our point across.
Spiro Agnew served as Vice-President under Richard Nixon, before becoming the only VP in American history to resign because of criminal charges (there was a bribery scandal). Agnew was also the first Greek-American to serve as US Vice President as he was the son of a Greek immigrant who had shortened the family name from Anagnostopoulos. Hubert Humphrey was the running mate of President Lyndon Johnson in the 1964 presidential campaign. Humphrey was sworn in as Vice President in 1965, becoming the 38th person to hold the office. Humphrey was the Democratic candidate for president in the 1968 election, but lost to Richard Nixon. Gerald Ford was the only person to have served as both Vice President and President of the US, without having been elected to those positions. Ford was nominated by President Richard Nixon to replace Vice President Spiro Agnew after he resigned in 1973. Vice President Ford assumed the presidency the following year after President Nixon resigned.
The ibis is a wading bird that was revered in ancient Egypt. “Ibis” is an interesting word grammatically speaking. You can have one “ibis” or two “ibises”, and then again one has a flock of “ibis”. And if you want to go with the classical plural, instead of two “ibises” you would have two “ibides”! Egrets are a group of several species of white herons. Many egret species were faced with extinction in the 1800s and early 1900s due to plume hunting, a practice driven by the demand for egret plumes that could be incorporated into hats.
“Détente” is a French word meaning “loosening, reduction in tension” and in general it is used to describe the easing of strained relations in a political situation. In particular, the policy of détente came to be associated with the improved relations between the US and the Soviet Union in the seventies.
A lepidopterist is a person who studies butterflies and moths, a name coming from Lepidoptera, the order of insects that encompasses such flying insects. “Lepidoptera” comes from the Greek words for “scale” and “wing”.
“2 Chainz” is the stage name of rapper Tauheed Epps.
A drowned valley might be called a ria or a fjord, and both are formed as sea levels rise. A ria is a drowned valley created by river erosion, and a fjord is a drowned valley created by glaciation.
The Lincoln Continental series of luxury automobiles was introduced by Ford way back in 1939. The original intent of the “Continental” name was to signify “continental European” exterior styling applied to an American body and chassis. Experts tend to cite the Lincoln Continental as the first personal luxury car.
“Dr. Dre” is the stage name of rapper Andre Romelle Young. He is known for his own singing career as well as for producing records and starting the careers of others such as Snoop Dogg, Eminem and 50 Cent.
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are a pair of courtiers in Shakespeare’s “Hamlet”. They also appear in the most famous play by British playwright Tom Stoppard, “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead” (which I saw years ago, and slept through!).
The novel “Lorna Doone: A Romance of Exmoor” was written by Richard Doddridge Blackmore. R. D. Blackmore was an English novelist, very celebrated and in demand in his day (the late 1800s). His romantic story “Lorna Doone” was by no means a personal favorite of his, and yet it is the only one of his works still in print.
“Clothing” might sometimes be referred to as “threads”.
The gnu is also known as the wildebeest, and is an antelope native to Africa. “Wildebeest” is a Dutch word meaning “wild beast”. The Horn of Africa is that horn-shaped peninsula at the easternmost tip of the continent, containing the countries Eritrea, Djibouti, Ethiopia as well as Somalia. The Horn of Africa is also known as the Somali Peninsula.
The B-52 Stratofortress has been a mainstay of the USAF since its introduction in 1955. The stated intention is to keep the B-52 in service until 2045, which would give a remarkable length of service of over 90 years.
The difference between a premium and regular gasoline is its octane rating. The octane rating is a measure of the resistance of the gasoline to auto-ignition i.e. its resistance to ignition just by virtue of being compressed in the cylinder. This auto-ignition is undesirable as multiple-cylinder engines are designed so that ignition within each cylinder takes place precisely when the plug sparks, and not before. If ignition occurs before the spark is created, the resulting phenomenon is called “knocking”. We sometimes use the adjective “high-octane” to mean “intense, dynamic, high-powered”
Kahlúa is a rum-based liqueur from Mexico that has a coffee flavor. A White Russian is a cocktail made from vodka, Kahlua or Tia Maria, and cream, served in an old-fashioned glass with ice. The White Russian is similar to a Black Russian, which is the same drink without the cream. Both cocktails are called “Russian” as they are based on vodka, and both have been around since the late forties, with no one seeming to know which drink came first.
The Office of Strategic Services (OSS) was formed during WWII in order to carry out espionage behind enemy lines. A few years after the end of the war the OSS functions were taken up by a new group, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) that was chartered by the National Security Act of 1947.
The Surrey town of Epsom in England is most famous for its racecourse (Epsom Downs), at which the Epsom Derby is run every year, one of the three races that make up the English Triple Crown. We also come across “Epsom salts” from time to time. Epsom salt is magnesium sulfate, originally prepared by boiling down mineral waters. Epsom was indeed a spa town at one time. The town is also home to Epsom College, an English “public school” (which actually means “private, and expensive”). One of Epsom’s “old boys” was the Hollywood actor Stewart Granger.
A lesion is a wound or any abnormal tissue found in an organism. The word “lesion” comes from the Latin word “laesio” meaning “injury”.
The E Street Band is the backing group for Bruce Springsteen. The band came together in 1972 but didn’t take a formal name until two years later. The keyboard player in the original line up was David Sancious, and his mother allowed the group to rehearse at her home. That home was on E Street in Belmar, New Jersey, and that’s where the band got their name.
The tailless primates known as apes (also “hominoids”) are divided into two main branches: gibbons (lesser apes) and hominids (great apes). The hominids are the great apes, and belong to the family of primates called Hominidae. Extant genera that make up the family Hominidae are:
“L.A. Law” ran on NBC from 1986 to 1994, and was one of the network’s most successful drama series. It took over from the equally successful “Hill Street Blues” in the Thursday night 10 p.m. slot until, after a six-year run, it was itself replaced by yet another respected drama, “E.R.” The opening credits showed that famous California license plate. The plate was on a Jaguar XJ for most of the series, but moved onto a Bentley towards the end of the run. For each series the registration sticker was updated, so no laws were being broken.
Italians use the term “marinara” not for a sauce, but in the name of a recipe that includes a tomato-based sauce. For example, “spaghetti alla marinara” would be a spaghetti dish, served “mariner’s style”. The tomato sauce that we call “marinara” is called “salsa di pomodoro” in Italy.
Virgin olive oil is oil produced from olives with no chemical treatment involved in the production process at all. To be labeled “virgin”, the oil must have an acidity level of less than 2% and must be judged to have “a good taste”. Extra-virgin olive oil (EVOO) comes from virgin oil production, and is the portion with acidity levels of less than 0.8% acidity that is judged to have “superior taste”.
“Peter Pan” is a 1953 animated feature by Walt Disney that is based on the J. M. Barrie play “Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn’t Grow Up”.
Serbia is a landlocked country in southeast Europe. After WWII, Serbia became one of several states making up the nation called Yugoslavia. Serbia became independent again in 2006 as Yugoslavia broke up after the declaration of independence by Montenegro. The country name “Kosovo” is an adjectival form of the Serbian word “kos” meaning “blackbird”. The name commemorates the “field of the blackbirds”, the site of a 1389 battle between Serbia and the Ottoman Empire. The dispute over Kosovo technically dates back to the implosion of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. The capital of Kosovo is Pristina.
The famous surrealist Salvador Dalí was born in Figueres, Spain. I had the privilege of visiting the Dalí Museum in Figueres some years ago, just north of Barcelona. If you ever get the chance, it’s a “must see” as it really is a quite magnificent building with a fascinating collection of art.
“Pecs” is the familiar name for the chest muscle, which is more correctly known as the pectoralis major muscle. “Pectus” is the Latin word for “breast, chest”.
Our word “repast”, meaning “meal”, came to us via French (in which language “repas” is “meal”). Ultimately the term comes from the Latin “repascere” meaning “to repeatedly graze”.
Venus and Serena Williams are two of the most successful and influential tennis players of all time. The sisters are also successful entrepreneurs. They have invested in various businesses, including a stake in the Miami Dolphins NFL team.
“Ragtag and bobtail” is a colorful phrase that’s used to describe the lowest classes, or the rabble. A “bobtail” is a horse that has had its tail cut short, a word that goes back as least as far as Shakespeare as he used it in “King Lear”. A “tag” is a piece of cloth that is torn and hanging, which was readily combined with “rag” in the original phrase “tag, rag and bobtail”. This idiom, perhaps originally quoted from Samuel Pepys in his diary in 1659, referred to the lower classes as “tag, rag and bobtail, dancing, singing and drinking”. The phrase evolved, giving us our contemporary word “ragtag” meaning ragged and unkempt. Something described as motley is mottled, marked with different-colored spots. The term probably comes from the Old English word “mot” meaning “speck”. We can use the term “motley” figuratively to mean “diverse, heterogeneous”.
“Sauté” is a French word. The literal translation from the French is “jumped” or “bounced”, a reference to the tossing of food while cooking it in a frying pan.
“Signs” is a very entertaining 2002 sci-fi thriller written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan. The film stars Mel Gibson as a former priest who finds crop circles in his cornfield, and becomes convinced that the circles are the work of extraterrestrials.
Some Dutch people can get a little annoyed if one refers to their country as “Holland”, as the correct name is “the Netherlands”. North and South Holland are two of the country’s twelve provinces. The use of “Holland” instead of “the Netherlands” is analogous to the former Soviet Union being referred to as “Russia” and the United Kingdom being called “England”. That said, sometimes even the Dutch people themselves refer to the country as Holland, especially at a soccer match!
Eva Longoria is a fashion model and actress who had a regular role on TV’s “Desperate Housewives”, playing Gabrielle Solis. Her travel and food show “Eva Longoria: Searching for Mexico” premiered on CNN in 2023. Read on, or … 1 Activation phrase for many smart devices : OK, GOOGLE 1 C8H18 : OCTANE Leave a comment (below), or …
… a complete list of answers
… leave a commentToday’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
1 Activation phrase for many smart devices : OK, GOOGLE
9 Music genre for Lorde and Lana Del Rey : ALT-POP
15 Certain dealer’s bailiwick : CAR SALES
16 What many sentences end with : PAROLE
17 Hyperbole from someone who’s dreaming big : THE SKY’S THE LIMIT!
20 Veep between Hubert and Gerald : SPIRO
25 Ibis or egret : WADER
26 Entered a state of détente, say : EASED
28 Some gear for lepidopterists : NETS
31 “___ or Go to the League,” 2019 hit album for 2 Chainz : RAP
35 Coastal water feature : RIA
40 Continental, e.g. : LINCOLN
42 Dr. of 31-Across : DRE
[31A “___ or Go to the League,” 2019 hit album for 2 Chainz : RAP] 43 Took out : ICED
45 Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, e.g. : DUO
54 Doone of fiction : LORNA
60 Deprive of threads? : STRIP
62 Horned one south of the Horn of Africa : GNU
66 One of eight in a B-52 : ENGINE
Down
1 C8H18 : OCTANE
2 White Russian ingredient : KAHLUA
4 C.I.A.’s predecessor : OSS
5 London’s ___ Park, near Epsom Downs : OAKS
7 Sore spot : LESION
8 Locale in Belmar, N.J., that lent its name to a noted rock-‘n’-roll band : E STREET
9 Great ___ : APE
10 1980s-’90s drama that won 15 Emmys : LA LAW
12 Tomato-and-basil pasta sauce : POMODORO
13 Pasta sauce ingredient : OLIVE OIL
14 Movie featuring the song “You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly!” : PETER PAN
23 Neighbor of a Kosovar : SERB
27 Who painted “Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening” : DALI
32 Upper-body workout target, informally : PECS
39 Meal : REPAST
49 Star close to Venus? : SERENA
51 Motley : RAGTAG
53 Causes to sizzle, say : SAUTES
57 Classic M. Night Shyamalan film with the tagline “It’s not like they didn’t warn us” : SIGNS
64 World Cup team from Holland, on scoreboards : NED
65 Actress Longoria : EVA
… return to top of pageComplete List of Clues/Answers
Across
9 Music genre for Lorde and Lana Del Rey : ALT-POP
15 Certain dealer’s bailiwick : CAR SALES
16 What many sentences end with : PAROLE
17 Hyperbole from someone who’s dreaming big : THE SKY’S THE LIMIT!
19 Brown ___ : ALE
20 Veep between Hubert and Gerald : SPIRO
21 Too good for : ABOVE
22 “Dang it!” : NUTS!
24 Handled things outside? : HOES
25 Ibis or egret : WADER
26 Entered a state of détente, say : EASED
28 Some gear for lepidopterists : NETS
30 Play on repeat : LOOP
31 “___ or Go to the League,” 2019 hit album for 2 Chainz : RAP
33 Contents of some bags in boxes : TEAS
35 Coastal water feature : RIA
36 Sole employee? : COBBLER
40 Continental, e.g. : LINCOLN
42 Dr. of 31-Across : DRE
43 Took out : ICED
45 Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, e.g. : DUO
46 Have nowhere to go but down : PEAK
48 Places where masks are seen indoors : SPAS
50 Name of three czars of Bulgaria : BORIS
54 Doone of fiction : LORNA
56 All in favor : AYES
58 It goes on and on and on : SAGA
59 Needs some icing, say : ACHES
60 Deprive of threads? : STRIP
62 Horned one south of the Horn of Africa : GNU
63 “Trust me, this is the right call” : YOU WON’T REGRET IT
66 One of eight in a B-52 : ENGINE
67 Think outside the box : INNOVATE
68 Fresh : RESTED
69 Fodder for a literature test : PASSAGESDown
2 White Russian ingredient : KAHLUA
3 Opens the door for, maybe : GREETS
4 C.I.A.’s predecessor : OSS
5 London’s ___ Park, near Epsom Downs : OAKS
6 Pictograph : GLYPH
7 Sore spot : LESION
8 Locale in Belmar, N.J., that lent its name to a noted rock-‘n’-roll band : E STREET
9 Great ___ : APE
10 1980s-’90s drama that won 15 Emmys : LA LAW
11 Like much land in Oklahoma : TRIBAL
12 Tomato-and-basil pasta sauce : POMODORO
13 Pasta sauce ingredient : OLIVE OIL
14 Movie featuring the song “You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly!” : PETER PAN
18 Traveler’s stopover : HOSTEL
23 Neighbor of a Kosovar : SERB
27 Who painted “Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening” : DALI
29 Aforementioned : SAID
32 Upper-body workout target, informally : PECS
34 Rebuff : SNUB
36 Turner once big in the music industry : CD PLAYER
37 Cookie-flavored ice cream treat : OREO CONE
38 Hearty hellos : BEAR HUGS
39 Meal : REPAST
41 Sweet sounds in a nursery : COOS
44 Travel that doesn’t require a hotel reservation : DAY TRIP
47 “Told ya!” : KNEW IT!
49 Star close to Venus? : SERENA
51 Motley : RAGTAG
52 Set off : IGNITE
53 Causes to sizzle, say : SAUTES
55 Together : AS ONE
57 Classic M. Night Shyamalan film with the tagline “It’s not like they didn’t warn us” : SIGNS
61 All in favor : PROS
64 World Cup team from Holland, on scoreboards : NED
65 Actress Longoria : EVA
… return to top of page