Always love these videos to end my day, thank you Chris! The daily uploads are genuinely much appreciated - thanks for taking the time to do these for us! ❤ Edited to add that these videos bring me much piece!
Commenting for the algorithm. Keep it up man. As a non-native English speaker, every crossword is cryptic for me lol. But I love to watch them being solved and being astonished by it
21A When applied to a person, a poser is one who poses, as for a portrait, while someone who is a faker is a poseur. But "poser" is certainly something that is hard to figure out.
I recognize that poseur it's an alternative spelling of poser, but if I saw someone spell it that way to call someone else a poser they'd totally be getting razzed on too
While Chris described SCHOLARSHIP as a property one uses to acquire knowledge, I think the intended reference is to the monetary prize or award one receives to go to college or uni.
I love it when you laugh at your own mistakes and ...Piece be unto you.
This is a new thing I didn't know I needed in my life. Your adorable face definitely helps.
what a way to end my hectic final exam week!!! loved this one as well as the others ⭐️
Always love these videos to end my day, thank you Chris! The daily uploads are genuinely much appreciated - thanks for taking the time to do these for us! ❤
Edited to add that these videos bring me much piece!
Rest in Pieces :)
Commenting for the algorithm. Keep it up man. As a non-native English speaker, every crossword is cryptic for me lol. But I love to watch them being solved and being astonished by it
21A When applied to a person, a poser is one who poses, as for a
portrait, while someone who is a faker is a poseur. But "poser" is certainly something that is hard to figure out.
I recognize that poseur it's an alternative spelling of poser, but if I saw someone spell it that way to call someone else a poser they'd totally be getting razzed on too
@rabbit you would perhaps call that person a poseur themselves
While Chris described SCHOLARSHIP as a property one uses to acquire knowledge, I think the intended reference is to the monetary prize or award one receives to go to college or uni.
38A "Bacon bit?" does not refer to meat, but rather an essay, a 'bit' of writing done by Sir Francis Bacon.
I spent way too many minutes on 40 down and across. "Stick (to)" is a more NYTesque clue for 40D. That clueing really threw me off.