May 5th, 2010 by Wordsman
This week’s puzzle:
A small business owner who always ends up on the losing side of fights is a selective music-hater. In the end he tells his old friends to leave him and makes new friends with his enemies.
Last week’s puzzle:
The President of the United States fires a nuclear missile at a target within his own country, but almost no one cares. Then later he gives away the secret to destroying the most powerful weapon on Earth and is lauded as a great hero.
And the answer is . . . ▼
Independence Day
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May 4th, 2010 by Wordsman
Portugal was of ill humor full
Screamed ’til faces turned blue—no, purple
“All this brand-new terrain—
Why should it go to Spain?
If you ask me, all this is just bull!”
Event: Pope Alexander VI issues the papal bull Inter caetera, granting rights to the majority of the New World to Spain
Year: 1493
Learn more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter_caetera
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Tordesillas
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May 3rd, 2010 by Wordsman
And the answer is . . . C! Here are the days of the week in the correct order, starting with Sunday:
日 月 火 水 木 金 土
The days in Japanese, rather than being named after the sun, the moon, and various ancient European deities, are named after the sun, the moon, and the classical Chinese elements. They are fire (Tuesday), water (Wednesday), wood (Thursday), metal (Friday), and earth (Saturday).
We hereby award 10 MWP’s to A Fan for having the most creative answer, 3 to Dragon for using logic in a situation where there’s no reason to expect it to work, and 2 to Shirley for knowing how to pick her ponies.
And speaking of ponies, this week’s challenge is animals. Since most of my readers have at least some experience with dogs, let’s see if you can pick the dog out from this lineup. Bonus points to anyone who wants to try to guess what the other animals are (yes, they’re all animals).
A. 犬 B. 牛 C. 馬 D. 猿 E. 鳥 F. 猫
Posted in Know Your Picture Characters |
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April 30th, 2010 by Wordsman
As the chopper soared away
A ringing CRACK was heard
The detonations had begun
And could not be deterred
Barret bellowed at the sky:
“GOD DAMN THE SHINRA! [expletive deleted]”
Tifa slapped him, shouted, “Help!
In this thing Cloud’s still stuck!”
Barret raised his arm and roared
The bullets blasted through
Cloud muttered, “Thanks for missing me”
Barret said, “Lucky you
“Doesn’t matter,” Barret sighed
He’d used up all his ire
“There’s no way to get out of here
Hey, wait . . . is that a wire?
“We can use this to escape!”
Cloud scoffed. “That little thing?”
“You got a better idea? Nope!
Just hold on tight and SWING!”
AVALANCHE clasped to the wire
They through the air did soar
The pillar snapped, the plate collapsed
Then Seven was no more
Posted in The Jenoviad |
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April 28th, 2010 by Wordsman
This week’s puzzle:
The President of the United States fires a nuclear missile at a target within his own country, but almost no one cares. Then later he gives away the secret to destroying the most powerful weapon on Earth and is lauded as a great hero.
Last week’s puzzle:
A young man who writes letters and dreams of traveling across the sea has his hopes dashed by a man who was trying to help him. A woman who read his last letter thinks there’s more to his story, so she decides to help the people who were directly responsible for making sure he couldn’t leave.
And the answer is . . . ▼
A Few Good Men
Posted in Movie Two-Liners |
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April 27th, 2010 by Wordsman
With Apartheid, blacks were kept remote
But it came to end, sure as boats float
They elected a fella
Named Nelson Mandela
The first time that they got to vote
Events: The Group Areas Act (formal institution of segregation) is passed; the first general election in which blacks could vote is held in South Africa
Years: 1950; 1994
Learn more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apartheid
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_African_general_election,_1994
Posted in This Day in History |
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April 26th, 2010 by Wordsman
And the long-awaited answer is . . . F! Here are the numbers four through ten in the proper order:
四 五 六 七 八 九 十
We hereby award one (1) MWP (Meaningless Wordsman Point) apiece to A Fan, Shirley, and Gramma F, because this is a game where you get points not for getting the right answer but for justifying your guess. Thanks to all who participated.
Before we move on from numbers, I’d just like to point out that kanji are always out to get you, even the simplest-looking ones. The numbers that I am using here, and which anyone would learn in a first-year Japanese class, are in fact simplified forms, meaning that they have more complex versions that are used in formal documents. One and two may be easy to recognize when they’re just one or two horizontal lines, but how about when they look like this?
壱(1) 弐(2) 参(3)
But now let’s proceed to another basic task: identifying the days of the week. Just as in English, in Japanese the days of the week follow a simple pattern, varying the beginning but all ending in the same way. Rather than ending in “-day,” however, they all end with this:
曜日
And let me tell you, as a freshman just starting to learn Japanese, that first character really made me wonder what I was getting myself into. Fortunately, none of the characters that actually differentiate the days are anywhere near that complicated. So here’s this week’s challenge: since today is Monday, tell me which of these characters is placed in front of the two shown above to mean “Monday.” And remember: points for creativity.
A. 火 B. 金 C. 月 D. 水 E. 土 F. 日 G. 木
Posted in Know Your Picture Characters |
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April 23rd, 2010 by Wordsman
They got back on the chopper
As Barret woke from his trance
Raised his gun, said, “Hold it there!
I’ll make you bastards dance!”
Tseng reached back into the hold
“You’d not want to hit this”
He placed afront him a bound girl
Tifa looked, cried, “Aeris!”
“Why’d you take her?” Tifa asked
Barret could only glare
“She’s the last Ancient,” Tseng replied
“Beyond that, I don’t care”
Aeris struggled to break free
“Tifa! That girl . . . Charlene!
She’s safe! She’s with my—ugh,” she groaned
As Reno punched her spleen
“How nice to save one little girl”
Tseng said as back he hopped
“That’s all you’ll get today, I fear
This sequence can’t be stopped”
“There you have it,” Reno said
“You cannot beat Shinra
You can blow up all you want
But we’ll always win. Duh”
Posted in The Jenoviad |
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April 21st, 2010 by Wordsman
This week’s puzzle:
A young man who writes letters and dreams of traveling across the sea has his hopes dashed by a man who was trying to help him. A woman who read his last letter thinks there’s more to his story, so she decides to help the people who were directly responsible for making sure he couldn’t leave.
Last week’s puzzle:
Two former warriors, assisted by a drug addict and a woman on the run, work together to save a company from some terrible publicity, among other things. Communication difficulties abound, but they’re hardly the worst of their problems.
And the answer is . . . ▼
Airplane!
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April 20th, 2010 by Wordsman
What are the oldest ballparks today?
We’ve two winners, both far and away
Will these grounds of the past
A full century last?
Field of Wrigley and Park of Fenway
Events: Fenway Park opens; Chicago Cubs play their first game at Wrigley Field (then Weeghman Park)
Years: 1912; 1916
Learn more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fenway_Park
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrigley_Field
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Major_League_Baseball_stadiums
Posted in This Day in History |
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