A Stunning Cryptic Crossword

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  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
  • You can play the crossword featured in the video at the link below:
    puzzles.indepe...
    Thanks to Mike Hutchinson for the recommendation and to Methuselah for creating such a beautiful puzzle.
    Mark has released his latest solve of The Times Club Monthly Special crossword on Patreon today. You can watch it at the link below:
    / crackingthecryptic
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Комментарии • 182

  • @LEEBLISSY
    @LEEBLISSY 2 года назад +205

    simon: making the most incredible deductions that I could never hope to understand
    me: haha he doesn't know what a blunt is

  • @BertBergaf
    @BertBergaf 2 года назад +115

    For a non-native speaker, incredibly difficult (not to say impossible), but these cryptic crosswords are really cool and I feel like I'm learning a lot every time I watch you solve one.

    • @amoswittenbergsmusings
      @amoswittenbergsmusings 2 года назад +5

      You do get used to the quirks of the English cryptic. Just keep at it. Berg af?? Berg op!

    • @DhansakPuzzles
      @DhansakPuzzles 2 года назад +4

      Do come and join me on my channel if you want to learn more. I solve and explain crosswords twice a week.

    • @jasminedavis6686
      @jasminedavis6686 2 года назад +13

      I'm a native English speaker and am absolutely hopeless at these so don't worry

    • @Hakucho64
      @Hakucho64 2 года назад +1

      Also super hard for native English speakers who don't live in the UK. I got about half of them out.

    • @terracottapie
      @terracottapie 2 года назад

      @@amoswittenbergsmusings He's just really really Berg. Berg a.f.

  • @rhysbart
    @rhysbart 2 года назад +85

    I've been watching the channel for almost a year now and never commented. But I have to acknowledge Simon's unexpected review of Love Actually. A wonderful tangent. More film reviews please.

  • @SnowTheJamMan
    @SnowTheJamMan 2 года назад +147

    Simon: *doing witchcraft*
    Me, after 2 minutes: Ooooh i get why running can mean "on"

  • @SomethingWellesian
    @SomethingWellesian 2 года назад +24

    It’s been so long since I did cryptic crosswords that I really struggled with this. Very good puzzle, though.
    I used to do Crosaire’s daily crossword in the Irish times. He started setting them in 1943, and had published over 14,000 by his death in 2010. He lived most of his life in Zimbabwe, and spoke sometimes of his delight at knowing how many people thousands of miles away would love to wring his neck.

  • @KumaKaori
    @KumaKaori 2 года назад +4

    19:40, when I saw Hammond and May, My mind went first to "Top Gear?. So I love that, indeed, that is the reference made in the answer XD;.

  • @elliottmanley5182
    @elliottmanley5182 2 года назад +25

    COITUS! Never in a million years did I think I'd get a crossword clue that Simon missed.

    • @JoQeZzZ
      @JoQeZzZ Год назад +2

      It was also really weird, since he immediately got US with I in a COT

  • @emo6577
    @emo6577 2 года назад +18

    These started making sense to me after I started framing the clues in my head as many layers of pun (a realization I came to after watching marks walk through of the clue basics). I don’t think I could do these on my own yet but I really understand the appeal

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 2 года назад +5

      When I was doing these about 20 years ago, I found the _Telegraph_ to be by far the easiest of the national dailies, so you might want to start there. _The Times_ is the most rigorously logical, and forbids a lot of the "funny business" you see in this crossword. Their Monday puzzles always used to be the easiest, getting gradually harder through the week. I generally found the Saturday puzzle to be more of a Wednesday/Thursday standard, with Friday's being the hardest. _The Times_ Jumbo puzzle on Saturdays was more like a Monday/Tuesday standard but bigger.

  • @longwaytotipperary
    @longwaytotipperary 2 года назад +27

    It all seems impossible until you explain it. Fun to watch!

    • @Wonderland_Jutomi
      @Wonderland_Jutomi 2 года назад +5

      Even after he explains it, it still seems like a total impossibility to me, hehe.

  • @addeleven
    @addeleven 2 года назад +44

    "There was an old colonel from Egypt"? I was certain you were going to break into a limerick at that point 😅

    • @willemg1
      @willemg1 2 года назад +16

      Since the clue mentioned a travel agency...
      There once was a colonel from Egypt,
      Who's task was this crossword to decrypt,
      He hurried along,
      And finished quite strong,
      The agency soon had him reshipped.

    • @SpencerTwiddy
      @SpencerTwiddy 2 года назад +7

      There was an old colonel from Egypt
      who had a crossword answer key shipped.
      He wanted to cheat
      with an answer sheet,
      but sadly he couldn’t read English.

  • @gordonglenn2089
    @gordonglenn2089 2 года назад +6

    I got 4 clues on my own and came back to watch Simon unravel the rest. There were some great surface reads and misdirects, those things that make cryptics so entertaining!

  • @cjmauger15
    @cjmauger15 2 года назад +12

    Freddie Highmore 😍 Hugh Laurie 😍 Hugh Grant 😍 and Simon Anthony 😍. England pumping out the gems on this episode.

  • @terracottapie
    @terracottapie 2 года назад +30

    Great video. I just wanted to say that "B" for second rate and "C" for third rate are not just crossword conventions; they're commonly used for those purposes (B- and C-list actors, for example). Not sure if intended, but Simon made it seem as though setters just decided to use those letters for those definitions but they're definitely found "in the wild" in English.

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 2 года назад +1

      Indeed, every one of those definitions for a single letter that are used in crosswords are used more widely, too. Otherwise nobody would understand them!

  • @AussieJohnny
    @AussieJohnny 2 года назад +7

    Like you Simon I do the Times Cryptic Crossword every day. I get it in the online version of The Australian newspaper. I do the crossword followed by the two CTC sudokus (wearing my CTC hoodie if it is cold enough).
    Today's crossword didn't load (it still pointed to yesterday's). I contacted The Australian's support and he tried to tell me I should relaunch the app, clear the cookies, etc, etc. I suggested that he should check on his computer and of course the problem was at their end. It is now 10pm and today's cryptic crossword has finally loaded.

  • @virtuous-sloth
    @virtuous-sloth 2 года назад +5

    I'm so happy to have got 22 across in about 30 seconds but otherwise would have been clueless. Simon's delight in doing this puzzle brings me delight.

  • @TheFreeBro
    @TheFreeBro 2 года назад +43

    I’d love to see more of these. Your literary skills are just a joy to watch. (Also it fits your recent trends of puzzles with no given digits :)

  • @DevonParsons697
    @DevonParsons697 2 года назад +19

    I love the cryptic crossword content!

  • @jplay9710
    @jplay9710 2 года назад +31

    Methuselah is the youngest setter? Something about that seems wrong.
    Anyway, the Rooney clue was phenomenal.
    Love Actually is great, I enjoyed the little interlude to talk about the parts of it you liked.

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 2 года назад +4

      Just means he has a lot of years left in him/her! On the other hand, I've a feeling I was aware of a crossword setter called Methuselah at least 20 years ago, so "youngest" doesn't necessarily mean "young".

  • @traviscochran9253
    @traviscochran9253 2 года назад +7

    I'm just happy I got the Hamlet clue before Simon. Excellent content as always folks.

  • @gatlygat
    @gatlygat 2 года назад +2

    Another comment mentioned the crossword setter David Astle from Australia.
    If you love cryptic crosswords and are unfamiliar with DA (David Astle or, as some say, 'Don't Attempt') PLEASE, do yourself a favour.
    He is one of the best on the planet
    He sets the Friday Cryptic for The Age/Sydney Morning Herald, and his themed crosswords are of legend
    Two examples are a Xmas crossword based on 'Noel' (i.e. No 'L') where the clues are double edged to cater for words with and without their Ls (i.e. like rally and ray) - and another one themed on circumnavigation where the answers wrapped around the grid (there are hundreds of other incredible ones that could be mentioned)
    Of particular interest for those into crosswords are books he has written
    'CLUETOPIA' is the 100 year history of crosswords done in 100 mini-chapters where every chapter is a year and based around a crossword clue from that year. (it is as brilliant as it sounds!)
    'REWORDING THE BRAIN' is an book explaining how to learn and do cryptic crosswords.
    and not to mention some amazing books for children based on fun with words and wordplay ('Wordburger', 'Gargantuan book of words' etc.)
    Even if you only get a tiny fraction of the joy he has provided me and my friends, it will be the discovery of the year.
    Merry Xmas CTCers
    🙂

    • @Hakucho64
      @Hakucho64 2 года назад

      DA is great overall, I have Rewording the Brain, but I find many of his clues to be overwrought, i.e. they can only be solved by retrospective justification. I prefer the DS cryptic on Saturdays, they're much more amenable to solving from first principles.

  • @th.nd.r
    @th.nd.r 2 года назад +29

    BEAUTIFUL puzzle, well set and well solved! Love seeing cryptics featured here. As an American though I would love to see a cryptic that isn’t so purely British. Nothing against y’all at all, I just want to get the references lol

    • @CreatrixTiara
      @CreatrixTiara 2 года назад +2

      Stephen Sondheim introduced cryptics to the Americans and I believe The Listener has his own take on cryptics for American players!

    • @th.nd.r
      @th.nd.r 2 года назад

      @@CreatrixTiara do you have any links? I would love to check these out!!

    • @powt0wn
      @powt0wn 2 года назад +1

      @@th.nd.r sondheim’s ones were very very hard. the new yorker does cryptics which are a little more approachable. every sunday i think

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 2 года назад

      Believe you me, on the net I see far more references I don't get (and are probably American) than British references.

  • @Stu_1977_SEmelb
    @Stu_1977_SEmelb 2 года назад +2

    Yaaay! Finally! Another cryptic! :) A great puzzle and a great solve, thank you, Simon. Many more videos like this, please! ♥

  • @teamcyeborg
    @teamcyeborg 2 года назад +1

    As an American, I will say that "Hammond and May" made me immediately think Top Gear

  • @byakb1868
    @byakb1868 2 года назад +7

    I would like to take this opportunity to also appreciate the genius that is Love Actually.
    (The puzzle is also fantastic!)

    • @anthonybailey5655
      @anthonybailey5655 2 года назад

      Sorry to grinch, but... I don't much like to see this film lauded without any acknowledgement of how it reduces women. So here's my token dissent.

  • @stephenjcarr1
    @stephenjcarr1 2 года назад

    I started doing this crossword after watching this video. I'd like to point out the puzzle from Wednesday Feb 2nd. It is brilliant - the theme is Homer's Odyssey. There are two clues 10a and 28a both with the same clue "A side of arsenic fed to awfully sly cop - one who detained hero (7)". At first I thought it was an error, but no - there are two different answers to the same clue. Brilliant !

  • @bryanroland9402
    @bryanroland9402 2 года назад +1

    I came here for the crosswords years ago and stayed for the sudoku. I'm duly appeased.

  • @amoswittenbergsmusings
    @amoswittenbergsmusings 2 года назад +3

    Oh, joy to the word! That was such fun! It's probably my sort of mind but 1ac was a write-in for me - and once that was in, 4ac became available by pure association. These apes are all systems go most of the time. Then 9ac came along with another association.
    Next phase: have a long stare and look around for low hanging fruit, forbidden or not. I needed 38 odds minutes.
    Watching Simon's solve clarified some wordplay for me. I wrote in the tragic Dane without really understanding how the clue worked. Lurkers and anagrams are much easier for me. I have much more trouble with intricate wordplay.
    Keep 'm coming, those xwords!!

  • @feasible
    @feasible 2 года назад +1

    Hamlet was the only clue I got before Simon, I very quickly spotted what "useless" was doing and spent the rest of the video waiting for his reaction when he figured it out!

  • @bristolrovers27
    @bristolrovers27 2 года назад +6

    Tough crossword, with some great clues and an excellent solve
    More plz 😀

  • @andymion
    @andymion 2 года назад +1

    An ape is a parrot. Another knowledge bomb from Cracking the Cryptic ;)

    • @Hakucho64
      @Hakucho64 2 года назад

      No, to ape someone is to parrot them (imitate what they say).

  • @sndmnc
    @sndmnc 2 года назад +7

    these might as well be magic to me, i'm looking at this stuff like a pig staring into a clockwork mechanism

  • @Sinebeast
    @Sinebeast 2 года назад +1

    When you were talking about Love Actually, you mentioned Colin Firth and I heard "Colin Furze".
    That would have been quite a different movie :D

  • @samtravis4822
    @samtravis4822 2 года назад +4

    The only one I got before Simon was “irate”, which he was unhappy with! I never do cryptic crosswords so maybe ignorance helped me on that one.

  • @venomthegirl2006
    @venomthegirl2006 2 года назад +4

    Poor innocent Simon, not knowing what a blunt is

  • @tonyroberts3926
    @tonyroberts3926 2 года назад +4

    President Nasser was never what I would call "old". He died unexpectedly of a heart attack aged 52.
    On the other hand, that is now over 50 years ago - so that's what makes it "old"

  • @JalebJay
    @JalebJay 2 года назад +27

    Would you consider doing only connect word walls (from custom setters instead of directly from the show) for some of your videos? Would be interesting to see logic you can make to justify some of them. I know it would be hard to explain them live as it's supposed to be a 3 minute challenge. However, I think it would be fun to watch. (Also, you two should try being on the show with your vocab skills)

    • @callummillar9177
      @callummillar9177 2 года назад +8

      I’m pretty sure they mentioned in 400k subs Q&A video that they were in talks with someone else to the third member of their team and were considering applying for the show.

    • @chitraagarwal8259
      @chitraagarwal8259 2 года назад +5

      I would give anything to see Simon interact with Victoria.. And he should tell her how much he loves David Mitchell too - just not the one who's her husband ;)

    • @AJCham
      @AJCham 2 года назад +2

      @@callummillar9177 I hope they name their team "The Bobbins"
      Edit: On second thoughts, maybe "The Naked Singles"

    • @chitraagarwal8259
      @chitraagarwal8259 2 года назад

      Just saw the latest episode of Only Connect (S17E24) ... The sequence in the second round about the ways to add to 14, with an acrostic poem spelling out the word Fourteen seemed so tailor made for Simon

  • @selenasilverstep7981
    @selenasilverstep7981 2 года назад +13

    US, I, in COT.... or something, can't see what that is.
    I saw that immediately and laughed out loud

    • @QemeH
      @QemeH 2 года назад

      I blame Sheldon for immediately getting this :D

  • @Teverell
    @Teverell Год назад

    Massachusetts was 'US state' and 'chasms' anagrammed together ('littered with'), I don't know how you didn't spot that because it was beautifully clued!!

  • @isaacbragg-gardiner2456
    @isaacbragg-gardiner2456 2 года назад +4

    YAS WE GOT MORE ACTUAL CRYPTICS!
    More of these please :)

  • @Draedaja
    @Draedaja 2 года назад +4

    Bless Simon for not knowing the meaning of "blunt" used here :)

  • @jodyvanliew2514
    @jodyvanliew2514 8 месяцев назад

    Another superb solve by Simon .

  • @kilimanjarocruz660
    @kilimanjarocruz660 2 года назад +2

    Great puzzle. And this was the first time when I figured a clue before Simon (19d)! Cheers.

  • @radd1865
    @radd1865 2 года назад +2

    It's fun to watch these now that I'm starting to understand how the clues work, thanks to this channel's wonderful videos. I'm afraid they're still a bit too British to make any headway on, but I can at least understand how you get there now!

  • @Swisswavey
    @Swisswavey 2 года назад +3

    Good to see a crossword again.
    I didn't fully understand 12a and a couple of the clues felt a tad clumsy but on the whole a nice puzzle.
    I've got to say I prefer The Times' crosswords though.

    • @nickloader3184
      @nickloader3184 2 года назад +2

      There are a number of issues with 12A. Firstly, the only way you could get SILVERED from 'aged' would be with a reverse clue: Clue to having aged? Turned grey. ('having' is a little dodgy here as it should be 'have' for the cryptic grammar but in order to have a natural sounding surface I have to bend the rules a little.) Then theoretically, you could have, "silver ed" as a clue which would yield AG (silver) ED. Unfortunately, it is not written as a reverse clue and the reason for that is the other issue which is the illegal elision which is occurring. You are not generally allowed to have the solver split a word into two parts unless those two parts are also words. Here, the setter is trying to find a loophole by saying 'after split'. What this actually does though is create a two-step or indirect clue which is, you guessed it, also illegal. The idea is though: AGED gets split into AG ED then used as a reverse clue - with no indicator to say so - to produce SILVER ED which as a clue would make AG ED, the definition, of course, is 'turned grey'. It's a cool idea but using current rules of elision it'd be impossible. Guess a similar but far less interesting idea on the flipside would be: Silverback gorilla's final plan (6) Anyway, everything else worked okay in my opinion.

  • @christopheredwards4012
    @christopheredwards4012 2 года назад +1

    Learnt the basic rules and did my first Times cryptic crossword off the back of this video. Took me nearly 24 hours on and off haha (I obviously slept in the middle).

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 2 года назад

      Nice one! I used to like the Times best when I was doing cryptics, a couple of decades ago. I should probably get back into the habit.

  • @garrettstoneburner6307
    @garrettstoneburner6307 2 года назад

    I love the way the setter used their name, which I know typically has a given meaning in cryptics, and uses in a completely different way.

  • @hoagy_ytfc
    @hoagy_ytfc 2 года назад

    Weird how different minds work - to me HAMLET and ADHERENCE were pretty obvious, yet I really would never have ever worked out EURPIDIES. Would love to see more Crossword content :)

  • @DDRFaQ
    @DDRFaQ 2 года назад +3

    Love Actually is definitely within my top 1000 favorite movies 👍

    • @Chiny_w_Pigulce
      @Chiny_w_Pigulce 2 года назад

      Not sure if I've even watched 1000 movies in my life...

  • @t71024
    @t71024 2 года назад

    Superb. My claim to fame was that I saw 5 down a few seconds before Simone said it (but I had no idea how to justify it).

  • @Airantu
    @Airantu 2 года назад +2

    I am not very good at crosswords any version and crypitc give me head aches trying to figure out but I did get Hamlet before you and that makes me feel great. (On the other hand you got everything else way before me)

  • @aqilariff1100
    @aqilariff1100 2 года назад

    I was yelling CLARKSON for the 18 down, but I was wrong. But still, it's his 'co hosts' hahaha nice one

  • @trueprotocol7467
    @trueprotocol7467 2 года назад +1

    14:20 calling it now: reverence

  • @roboduck200
    @roboduck200 2 года назад +1

    I got HAMLET, but parsed it differently.
    Methuselah = ME
    Cut = HALT
    Terribly useless = anagram

  • @myrthestammen2634
    @myrthestammen2634 2 года назад

    I didn't understand any of the clues myself, but the clue about Hammond and May instantly made me think about top gear, so I'm proud that I got that right

  • @glum_hippo
    @glum_hippo 2 года назад +1

    Excellent puzzle. Excellent debut!

  • @seanmauricerobinson
    @seanmauricerobinson 2 месяца назад

    22A - Hamlet - It is very ableist, but I justified Hamlet but cutting the word ‘Halt’ (lame, crippled) with ‘Me’ (ie Methuselah). I think it works two ways!

  • @nickloader3184
    @nickloader3184 2 года назад +3

    Now it is my turn to gloat and say I got BONOBO, ORALLY and HAMLET before Simon and to ignore the fact that he was streets ahead of me on everything else ;) Agree on the quality of this grid. Not a fan of the SILVERED clue - the concept is excellent, just totally illegal in many newspapers - and I agree on ? for IRATE - should really have 'introductory' or 'as part of job description' or something in my opinion. Still, that aside, some amazing clues as Simon pointed out: CHARMED LIFE and COHOSTS as well as PARDON and a bunch of others.

  • @TrekBeatTK
    @TrekBeatTK 2 года назад

    Massachusetts may not be littered with chasms, but we do have a few! Purgatory Chasm probably being the most famous.

  • @ButcherBeynon
    @ButcherBeynon 2 года назад

    Colin Firth's Portugese love interest in Love Actually is 'Aurelia'

  • @zacharycampbell1002
    @zacharycampbell1002 2 года назад

    Some really great faces in this puzzle! Excellent solves, Simon!

  • @sanctionbuster
    @sanctionbuster 2 года назад

    Best line in Love Actually: "8 is a lot of legs, David."

  • @dangturkey3947
    @dangturkey3947 2 года назад +6

    Have you ever attempted some of David Astle's cryptic crosswords? He is known to produce some great themed puzzles and I love doing them every Friday down in Australia.

    • @theunamiable
      @theunamiable 2 года назад

      The is a CTC video where Mark does a DA crossword in blinding speed. That's what introduced me to the channel. It's hard to find though.

    • @theunamiable
      @theunamiable 2 года назад +1

      I found it by trawling through their spreadsheet. Not sure I can link to it, but it's called "The Age" - Themed Crossword from 2/8/19.

    • @australiajohn
      @australiajohn 2 года назад +1

      DA's cryptics were always a Friday highlight for me too, until I moved overseas. A great challenge!

    • @Psionic1
      @Psionic1 2 года назад

      @@theunamiable ruclips.net/video/c0f9yQDseug/видео.html

  • @pallasproserpina4118
    @pallasproserpina4118 2 года назад +3

    I’m just proud of having gotten “Hamlet”

  • @GordonjSmith1
    @GordonjSmith1 2 года назад

    I find the cross word puzzle vlogs so much more interesting than the sudoko ones. More please.

  • @bruceyanoshek626
    @bruceyanoshek626 Год назад

    Thank you for explaining Hamlet. I was confused by the extra H.

  • @bibliopolist
    @bibliopolist 2 года назад +1

    Hey, don't forget the Joanna Page/Martin Freeman "story" :-)

  • @TheMrVengeance
    @TheMrVengeance 2 года назад

    Can someone explain why some clues "wouldn't be allowed"? Like the 'useless' in the Hamlet clue. I've heard Simon mention it every now and then but I don't get why.

  • @mumiemonstret
    @mumiemonstret 2 года назад +1

    Oh, is this the origins of what I thought was a strangely named Sudoku channel?

  • @keithlewis7205
    @keithlewis7205 2 года назад +3

    Love the cryptic crosswords. Please do more

  • @KusaneHexaku
    @KusaneHexaku 2 года назад +1

    I got 18 Down before Simon!! I'm so happy I got one :D

  • @jessicatait1867
    @jessicatait1867 2 года назад

    Love to see CtC doing a crossword!

  • @XperimentalUnit
    @XperimentalUnit 2 года назад

    Can the Hamlet clue be a double wordplay? I thought of the Ham from the bible. He also lived long, like Methusela, and "terribly useless" could be in reference to the "curse of Ham." And then "let" could be short for "bloodletting," which would be a cut.

  • @JamieAtSLC
    @JamieAtSLC 2 года назад +1

    More cryptics please!

  • @seanm9306
    @seanm9306 2 года назад

    Gammon and May was genius!

  • @longwaytotipperary
    @longwaytotipperary 2 года назад +1

    Why would the clue about Hamlet not be allowed by Times?

  • @roughryder5
    @roughryder5 2 года назад

    How in the world?!?! I would really love for you to do the LSAT exam. Or at least the Logic Games portion of it. I genuinely want to see how you would score since you're so good at making deductions I wouldn't even have caught in a million years.

  • @elLooto
    @elLooto 2 года назад +1

    2D mad = angry = irate

  • @dworldruler
    @dworldruler 2 года назад +2

    I am trying so hard to follow this and completely failing. Nothing like feeling like a complete moron first thing in the morning! :D Still, great solve and entertaining as always, Simon. Keep it up!

  • @shifttheshaman
    @shifttheshaman 2 года назад

    Beautiful phrasing.

  • @utoddl
    @utoddl 2 года назад

    First one of these I'd seen. Wow. I've spent 60+ years under the delusion that I was a native English speaker. Now, having doubts.

  • @TomHickey
    @TomHickey 2 года назад

    I don't quite follow the cryptic crosswords, as it seems there is too much required hive knowledge to just pick them up and take a stab. Though, my favorite part of this was how Simon just broke into casual conversation (e.g. the Love Actually bit)... don't often get to see him just chatting it up.

  • @lawskuboi
    @lawskuboi 2 года назад +3

    Was so shocked that Simon literally said "US.. I.. in cot" for 1A and yet didn't get coitus?? That was the only clue I could get on my own

  • @noahhobson4521
    @noahhobson4521 2 года назад +1

    This puzzle made my head hurt. At least with the sudoku I can usually solve them, even if it takes me about three or four times longer than it takes you. That crossword I'd have banged my head against for ten minutes without understanding a single clue and then given up in disgust.

    • @FleckerMan
      @FleckerMan 2 года назад +1

      There's a couple introduction to cryptic crossword videos on the channel, I manage to get maybe 3 words pausing before they do though even after watching a few of them :)

    • @zmaj12321
      @zmaj12321 2 года назад

      There's a steep learning curve to these, much steeper than sudoku

    • @btestware
      @btestware 2 года назад

      Did you try bifurcating? That usually works if all else fails.

  • @owenroche5247
    @owenroche5247 2 года назад

    Does anyone know where the “New York state falls and Massachusetts flew” line is from? I remember Simon mentioning it in a previous video about his favorite novel, but I cannot find it for the life of me!

    • @Anne_Mahoney
      @Anne_Mahoney 2 года назад

      It was about 2 days ago so you shouldn't have to look far.

    • @owenroche5247
      @owenroche5247 2 года назад

      @@Anne_Mahoney just looked back and it’s “the bone clocks” by David Mitchell. Thanks for the reply

  • @vpr0
    @vpr0 2 года назад +1

    Can someone suggest some absolutely easiest cryptic crosswords? I'm not a native speaker and I would like to try

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 2 года назад

      I don't know about "absolutely easiest" but when I was doing cryptics about 20 years ago, the Telegraph was the easiest of the national dailies. The wordplay was usually fairly straightforward, and the vocabulary not too crazy. The Times was very logical and doesn't allow a lot of the funny business that goes on in this crossword; the Guardian was mostly funny business. The Times gets harder through the week, so start off with Monday/Tuesday puzzles.

  • @djpheeze
    @djpheeze 2 года назад

    Why is 22A against the rules? I think 3D is edging the rules more than 22A.

  • @Darkstar2342
    @Darkstar2342 2 года назад

    Anyone know if there are similar crosswords in German? I'd like to try but don't feel confident enough to tackle one in English :-D

  • @TheMeanAdmin
    @TheMeanAdmin 2 года назад

    Finished watching this. Finally I have the answer to how people create anagram based conspiracy theories and interpret Koko's sign language o_O

  • @richy77
    @richy77 2 года назад

    Love these!

  • @stephenjames2951
    @stephenjames2951 2 года назад +1

    I think the short sentence is ‘I’

  • @graceambrose536
    @graceambrose536 2 года назад +1

    I’ve never done more than a magazine crossword and I am so lost 😂 anagrams?? Second rate being b?? Huh 😂

    • @thecommexokid
      @thecommexokid 2 года назад +2

      As in a “B-list” celebrity, for instance. Or various food products that are sold as “Grade A” but also have B-grade versions

    • @graceambrose536
      @graceambrose536 2 года назад +1

      @@thecommexokid ahhhhh I see !! Thank you !!

  • @feasible
    @feasible 2 года назад

    Great video, but I have no idea where, "New York state dropped away and Massachusetts flew," comes from and it's driving me mad! Google is not helping, either.

    • @b3z3jm3nny
      @b3z3jm3nny 2 года назад +1

      From the book “The Bone Clocks”

  • @weemanling
    @weemanling 2 года назад

    Less Sudoku, more cryptics.

  • @Unchained_Alice
    @Unchained_Alice 2 года назад

    Love 1 across, I find that word funny. :p

  • @tc2461
    @tc2461 2 года назад

    I normally have Sonne troubles understanding the sudoku solutions but i dont even stand a chance at this even after the explanation

  • @davidsiegel9363
    @davidsiegel9363 2 года назад +26

    Meaning of blunt -- a blunt is a thing people smoke (marijuana). So they smoke it and then share the last of it with their girlfriends. Maybe this is an Americanism -- Clinton famously said he "did not inhale". Entertaining video, cryptics are still beyond me.

    • @HienNguyenHMN
      @HienNguyenHMN 2 года назад +9

      It's kind of endearing that Simon didn't understand that.

    • @jackw7714
      @jackw7714 2 года назад +1

      It is a term used in the UK (it's rolled using thicker tobacco paper, as opposed to rizler rolling paper, but with no tobacco)

    • @oiseaubaladeur
      @oiseaubaladeur 2 года назад +3

      @@HienNguyenHMN would love to share a blunt with Simon though

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 2 года назад

      @@HienNguyenHMN Really? It mostly just means he doesn't have any marijuana-smoking friends. I also don't have any marijuana-smoking friends, so I didn't know it either. Just like I don't have any friends who are into carpentry so I don't know woodworking terms.

    • @Hakucho64
      @Hakucho64 2 года назад

      Not knowing this meaning actually helped Simon, by preventing him from being misled.

  • @shlaz2740
    @shlaz2740 2 года назад

    I liked this channel better before the Michael Crichton diss. ER was cutting edge TV at the time.

  • @alexainsworth9840
    @alexainsworth9840 Год назад

    Simon, Yes Mickey Rooney, the famous actor, was married to Ava Gardner.

  • @Pwecko
    @Pwecko 2 года назад +2

    That was funny. I got Hamlet immediately and two others before Simon, including Silvered. Unfortunately, the link in the description didn't work. Maybe a problem with the website.

    • @Hakucho64
      @Hakucho64 2 года назад

      The link landed me in January 2022 (this month). I had to scroll back to find the right puzzle. Luckily Simon said 18 Dec in the intro.

  • @isabelamacedobellsita8394
    @isabelamacedobellsita8394 2 года назад +1

    Acre is also a brazilian state. Hahahahahahha