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Puzzles with words and things
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You play a long slow deadweight red to a corner pocket. As it approaches the pocket, a kamikaze woodlouse crawls out from under the cushion and makes its way across the table, conflicting with the path of the red precisely at the point the red gets there. The red, needless to say, veers off course, and the future of the woodlouse is uncertain. - The Statman
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Can do a question after?You play a long slow deadweight red to a corner pocket. As it approaches the pocket, a kamikaze woodlouse crawls out from under the cushion and makes its way across the table, conflicting with the path of the red precisely at the point the red gets there. The red, needless to say, veers off course, and the future of the woodlouse is uncertain. - The Statman
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I am afraid I will have to disallow 'deeded' as, in both Chambers online and Rhymezone (http://www.rhymezone.com/r/rhyme.cgi...rg1=syl&org2=l) there is no mentinon of the word 'deed' as a verb. Therefore I will give myself the point for the 6-letter sequence from the first O to the second N in 'commonness'.
Hereis the table after Round 2:
Pos. . . . . . . . Points . . . . . . Person
1 . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . The Statman
2 . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . elvaago
(We will assume the same principles as in the snooker quiz, whereby you go straight to the top of your new points total to avoid tied positions.)
ROUND THREE
Over to Mitsuko.
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ROUND THREE: What is the longest Englsh word you can find, consisting of only "short letters". For example "common" is a short letter word. I will allow "i" to be considered a short letter.
The longest answer by 3.30pm today will be awarded the points.You play a long slow deadweight red to a corner pocket. As it approaches the pocket, a kamikaze woodlouse crawls out from under the cushion and makes its way across the table, conflicting with the path of the red precisely at the point the red gets there. The red, needless to say, veers off course, and the future of the woodlouse is uncertain. - The Statman
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Yes that is what I meant, I'm not very good at explainingYou play a long slow deadweight red to a corner pocket. As it approaches the pocket, a kamikaze woodlouse crawls out from under the cushion and makes its way across the table, conflicting with the path of the red precisely at the point the red gets there. The red, needless to say, veers off course, and the future of the woodlouse is uncertain. - The Statman
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Maybe I should reduce the timelimitYou play a long slow deadweight red to a corner pocket. As it approaches the pocket, a kamikaze woodlouse crawls out from under the cushion and makes its way across the table, conflicting with the path of the red precisely at the point the red gets there. The red, needless to say, veers off course, and the future of the woodlouse is uncertain. - The Statman
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I have a 17 letter word
I believe it's the longest possible, so if you get it the round would end now.You play a long slow deadweight red to a corner pocket. As it approaches the pocket, a kamikaze woodlouse crawls out from under the cushion and makes its way across the table, conflicting with the path of the red precisely at the point the red gets there. The red, needless to say, veers off course, and the future of the woodlouse is uncertain. - The Statman
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Originally Posted by MitsukoDeeded"I'll be back next year." --Jimmy White
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My 17 ıs only valıd ıf you consıder plurals of words endıng ın -ness (etc.) as allowable.
Some are obvıous, lıke ıllnesses and wıldernesses, but some, for example remoteness, cleverness, sharpness, usefulness, are more dubıous sınce you would almost never need them.
However, they are nouns and you could argue that there are some cırcumstances where they would be useful.
Take the word hardness – you could talk of 'dıfferent hardnesses of rock' or whatever. So ıf I am useful ın one way, and you are useful ın another, you could correctly say that these are dıfferent usefulnesses. If we were both useful ın the same way, then that would be only one usefulness.
A communıty ın the mountaıns has remoteness, so does a communıty on a small ısland. But they are dıfferent kınds of remoteness – and theır respectıve remotenesses are quıte dıstınct.
And so I gıve to you the plural of unnecessarıness, whıch ıs unnecessarınesses!
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I will allow that
The word I had was unceremoniousness which wouldn't work as plural.
If i was not accepted the longest word I had was overnumerousness.
Here is the table after Round 3:
Pos. . . . . . . . Points . . . . . . Person
1 . . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . . The Statman
2 . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . elvaago
ROUND FOURYou play a long slow deadweight red to a corner pocket. As it approaches the pocket, a kamikaze woodlouse crawls out from under the cushion and makes its way across the table, conflicting with the path of the red precisely at the point the red gets there. The red, needless to say, veers off course, and the future of the woodlouse is uncertain. - The Statman
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By vırtue of my logıc, you could have had the plural, unceremonıousnesses!
But thank you!
ROUND FOUR
A vegetable, a country, a musical instrument, a disease, without doubt, a mathematical formula, conduct, an advancement of exceptional scope, idiots, chaos.
All clues for words which share a quality. For example, for the first few you might have:
Potato, Lesotho, piccolo, lumbago... and they woould all be words ending in 'O'.
What are the answers and what do they have in common?
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