Monthly Archives: April 2009

A question of colour

Good Morning
I have just received my Christine’s BIG crossword book for May 2009 and whilst doing the Diamond crossword I found the clue (violet antiseptic). Your answer was “iodine”. Well iodine is Yellow/Brown. The violet antiseptic is (or was when I was a child, a long time ago) Condy’s Crystal. It has a violet [more…]

Thanks for online Code Cracker

Thank you so much for your daily updated online puzzles and especially the latest addition of Code Cracker. I find I love coming home to relax with the variety of puzzles after work and just before going to bed. When I go away on holiday, never do I go without the BIG CROSSWORD BOOK. [more…]

They all keep me happy!

Thank you for many happy hours of puzzling. George, now aged 76 has heart problems (4 heart attacks) and rests a great deal. I put up my little folding table, get out my books and spend a most pleasant afternoon or evening puzzling.

I use a Miriam-Webster Crossword Reference, a Collins dictionary and a set [more…]

Kakuro Video Tutorial

Kakuro can be considered a type of crossword where the clues appear as sum totals and the answers are a sequence of numbers. When added together, the numbers match the given totals...

Lady Godiva

Lady Godiva is renowned for riding through the streets of Coventry — naked! What is less known however, is why such a pious woman would do such a thing.

Lady Godgifu, her real name, was married to Leofric, the Earl of Mercia. She was a beautiful woman who cared greatly for the people of Coventry [more…]

Old Vic

Have you seen the clue ‘London theatre, Old …’ and wondered who Old Vic was?

This famous London theatre was originally named The Royal Coburg Theatre when it first opened in 1818 but was renamed the Royal Victoria Theatre in 1833. It soon became known as the Old Vic and the name has stuck.

From 1914-1923 [more…]

Hell-bent

Hell-bent for leather?

Have you ever heard someone say that they are hell-bent on doing something? Did you understand they meant they were very determined, but didn’t really know what the phrase literally means?

This saying has been has been popular since the early 19th century and describes someone who is prepared to go “to the gates of hell” [more…]

Kangaroo court

A kangaroo court is not a legal proceeding in the Australian outback, nor does it involve hopping marsupials.

It refers to a criminal proceeding that is conducted for show, where the defendant is undoubtedly going to be found guilty.

The earliest use of the term was recorded not in Australia as you might expect, but [more…]

Can You Read These Lines?

DERE DAGO
FORTE LORES
INA RO
DEMARNT LORES
DEMAR TRUX
FULA ENSAN
COUSAN DUX

Translation: There they go, forty lorries in a row. Them aren’t lorries, them are trucks, full of hens and cows and ducks.

Wynne Harwood
Blenheim, NZ