18:07
Want to hear a joke about potassium? K. Want to hear one about sodium? Na.
Today's theme features the 151-year old Periodic Table. It seemed to me that the clearest way to explicate the science-based theme was with equations. Thus:
Clue = Element symbol + word + ?
Answer = [Element name represented by symbol spelled out] + synonym for additional word = common item or adjective.
Example: 43A: Aground? Ag is the symbol for silver and 'bullet' is a synonym for a round QED: the answer is SILVERBULLET.
My favorite was OXYGENSUPPLY for Oration? - ha! It reminds me of the old ads for Ken-L Ration. Anybody remember those?
It took me rather too long to solve the equation, but I finally figured it out with IRONMAN (Female?) when I had IRO_MAN. :)
I had some trouble in the southwest. I got the CARBON for the C in "Cold?" at 57A, but I lead myself astray trying to fit AgED or AgEr at the end for 'old', completely overlooking the D. It was a NOgO until I thought of HATER for "Curmudgeonly sort." Then, BOOMt!
~Frannie.
sometimes I feel so cold that it is almost like the cold is originating inside me instead of from the outside and I will never get warm. I thought this crossword was a pain in the ass to be honest
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ReplyDeleteWow, great review from Frannie, and harsh critique from Anonymous! I suppose, though, if one doesn't grok the theme quickly, the attempted solve could cause quite a bit of angst. I, luckily, was ready for such a theme as we'd seen similar offerings in the past. This was a little different, however, in a good way. My least favorite of the theme answers was CARBONDATED, because if something can be CARBONDATED, it isn't very old, geologically speaking. I refuse to look things up on Google, but I seem to remember that things can't be much older than 100,000 years or so (it could be tens of thousands) in order to be accurately dated using that method. So I didn't think that the clue 57A Cold? quite cut the mustard. The others were great, though, and I have to agree with Frannie on OXYGENSUPPLY as perhaps the best of the bunch. Yes, I remember the Ken-L Ration commercials. I'd love to do away with answers like CYST, but I suppose they're necessary on occasion. Funny that LETS and NOT abut.
Cute puzzle -- I enjoyed it. And I, too, remember the Ken-L Ration ads, as in: "My dog's better than your dog!"
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