CancelReport This Post

Please fill out the form below with your name, e-mail address and the reason(s) you wish to report this post.

 

Crossword Help Forum
Forum Rules

rusty

25th August 2017, 15:53
Hello, Elle!
I can not remember what Joan sang, too.
Look on YouTube?
Everything in the whole wide world is there!
Just had a Tweet from Trotty.
Her and Jason Kenny are now the proud parents of Albert Louie who arrived on the 23rd, 8lb 12 ozs.
Well done, Trotty!
3d, Think it may be a French word for a resin?
Wee hint, "muddy ground" could be a "bog".
10a, This is a French month, from time gone by.
And it is something to do with cooking, maybe.
I came across it reading about Madame Dubarry etc.
15, Hint, you "relate" a story.
It is an economic term.
27a, The insect "buzzes" in summer.
The definition is someone from a certain African country.
Let me know if they are any help to you, Elle?
15621 of 30765  -   Report This Post

elle

25th August 2017, 16:45
Hi, Rusty!
My goodness, "Albert" is a very old-fashioned name!
I wonder if he will thank his parents for that "moniker"?
Your hints were very helpful......
I now have 10a: thermidor - double definition
3d: gamboge = yellow ( yes, a gum resin)
game - match
bog- muddy ground.
I should have got this, even though I had never heard the word "gamboge"!
and 27a: Beninese = African
bee - insect that flies
nines - squares
I should have got "nines" !
I was looking for an African insect!
I should still be stuck if you hadn't helped me!
Thank you.
Joan Baez still sings of "Mary"....having listened again to the lyrics, I guess there was no viable alternative!



Hello, Chris!
I tend to think of Prize crosswords, as applying to the weekends.... I do try (when I remember) to avoid giving answers then,......
Do you know anything about Clitheroe Grammar, Chris?
Have you ever taught there?
My cousin's grandson is about to start there.
15622 of 30765  -   Report This Post

chrise

25th August 2017, 16:47
I haven't taught there, but friends of mine have. Very good school (so they tell me...)!
15623 of 30765  -   Report This Post

chrise

25th August 2017, 16:50
Where does your cousin live, elle (or, more pertinently, his/her offspring)? Clitheroe is "good in parts" (like the curate's egg), but the surrounding Ribble Valley is good in total.
15624 of 30765  -   Report This Post

elle

25th August 2017, 17:04
Hello, Chris!
Oh, they live in Blackburn, near Witton Country Park.
The boy will have quite a long journey to commute to school.
I think the plan is to take him part way by car, to where he will catch the school bus?
He's a bright lad, and my cousin tells me this school is a good option for him?
It is her other daughter who lives nearer to you, in the disputed territory.......
15625 of 30765  -   Report This Post

chrise

25th August 2017, 17:06
I taught at QEGS in Blackburn, but it isn't the same sort of school now....
15626 of 30765  -   Report This Post

rusty

25th August 2017, 17:40
Hello, Elle,
I have just had some of the steak pie.
It was grand!
Old fashioned was my original thought when I read Albert, and Louie is not far behind.
But that will be unfair.
It may well be a family name that they intend to go on?
Laura's dad is Adrian. Jason's dad is Michael. So...?
Laura's dogs are called Sprolo and Pringle, wherever she found those names!
I have a mad idea at the back of my head that she said the dogs were "Sproodles"?
You heard of them?
Are you happy with "relation" and "f"(ine) ?
15627 of 30765  -   Report This Post

elle

25th August 2017, 19:17
Hi, Rusty!
Yes, sorry, did I not mention "reflation"?
I found this one the hardest though.
I did not think of "relation" as in the telling of a story.....but as "being connected" to...if you follow me?
I understand it now, though.
I take your point about perhaps wanting "Albert" to be the continuation of a family name.....although more usually if (as we think) it is 'old-fashioned' , then more usually it would be given as a second or third name?
My daughter chose my father's name as one of YB's forenames, but we all agreed that though we liked the idea of the name being carried on, we did not want YB commonly known by that name .
Am I making sense?
I suspect (although I haven't heard the term before) that a "sproodle" might well be a across between a spaniel and a poodle?
Like the more commonly known "labradoodle"?
Your steak pie sounds great......I am off to get dinner!
15628 of 30765  -   Report This Post

rusty

25th August 2017, 19:51
Good evening, Elle!
I went back to Trotty's Tweet and there are dozens of responses.
Quite a few complimenting them on the choice of names!
I hoped to find out why they chose the names, especially Louie instead of Louis, but no luck!
She has posted a nice pic of her and Jason sitting on a park bench with Albert Louie between them in a carry cot, and Sprolo and Pringle at their feet.
Very domesticated is Trotty!
Yes, I understand about your daughter naming her son after her Granddad.
The thing is, he will have two Granddads, and you would not like to hurt folks feelings!
I looked up "Sproodle" on YouTube.
Lovely dogs.
There are loads of videos on them!
Well done on "reflation"!
15629 of 30765  -   Report This Post

elle

25th August 2017, 20:46
Hi, Rusty!
Ah, but both my daughters have named their children after both sides of the family - so there are no hurt feelings!
Each boy has his own individual name by which he is commonly known.
Then they each have the name of a grandfather / great - grandfather from both the maternal and paternal sides of the family.
The girls opted to do this as they wanted to preserve the "family" names.
I think it is a nice idea, even if it isn't handed down any further.
Yes, a springer spaniel/ poodle combination will be an adorable combination.
My own dog is half spaniel......although her "other half" remains a mystery!
My watch has stopped...I shall have to visit the jewellers in the morning to buy a new battery.


15630 of 30765  -   Report This Post