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rusty

19th December 2017, 17:08
Hello, Elle!
Well done, British Gas!
And you had a pleasant young engineer, too.
You can relax now, ahead of your family's visit.
Peace of mind!
I have a Gold Star contract with WRB and it works out very well for me.
A good puzzle today.
9a, is a new meaning to me.
11a, and 23a, are new words to me.
28a, was vaguely remembered!
I enjoyed it!
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elle

19th December 2017, 17:59
Hi, Rusty!
Yes, I enjoyed the 15 x15 and the QC - both done early this morning due to my being confined to barracks!
I don't understand 9a: I have "panic" = "great alarm" (def )
but how does "grass" come into it?
Have I misunderstood something?
I liked 13a, 25a, 14d and 18d.
I think that 25a was my favourite........but I didn't realise that the answer "parricide" could refer to the perpetrator, as well as the crime!
I had to check that with Chambers.
A good homophone, I thought?
"Paris eyed" sounds like "parricide".
I liked it!
Yes, "touraco" was a new word to me, too.
The crosswords filled in a few dull moments while waiting for BG!
I have also wrapped all my (so far existing) Christmas presents!
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rusty

19th December 2017, 18:41
Hello, Elle!
Apparently "panic" is a type of grass!
So says Chambers, anyway!
A "regicide" is a person or an act, so it looks like "parricide" is the same.
I did not make the connection with "Paris eyed", Elle.
Well done!
I had cheesey chips for tea.
Very simple, very tasty!
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elle

19th December 2017, 19:45
Hi, Rusty!
I have never had cheesey chips?
Are they just "ordinary" chips covered with a cheese sauce?
Do you eat them with anything else, or by themselves?
How about this for a good word?
"Hornswoggle".
Do you know it?
I found it used by Bertie Wooster, in another P.G. Wodehouse book.
It means hoodwink/ hoax/ bamboozle / trick or cheat.
I have found a clue I missed......
20d: Eccentric son at university going over grounds (6)
?A?P?S
I think its "campus" = "grounds" (def)
up - at university
s - son
But "cam"? I thought it was a river?
It surely doesn't mean "eccentric", does it?
I couldn't find that in Chambers.
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rusty

19th December 2017, 20:05
Hello, Elle!
Cheesey Chips are simply chips with melted cheese on.
I do know of "hornswoggle".
Remember it being used in cowboy pictures.
A "cam" in engineering is eccentric, yes.
I'll have look in Chambers later.
Have you heard of a "camshaft" in a car engine?
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rusty

19th December 2017, 20:11
Hello, Elle,
Anne Bradford has "cam" under "eccentric".
Chambers has
cam (mech) an irregular projection on a revolving shaft or rotating cylinder, etc etc.
"Irregular" meaning "eccentric".
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rusty

19th December 2017, 20:19
Here you go, Elle!
http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords/ww-hor1.htm
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elle

19th December 2017, 21:13
Hey, Rusty!
Brrh, it's still cold here!
Even to open the patio door to let the dog into the garden, has had me shivering!
How disappointing that you already knew "hornswoggle"!
I thought I might surprise you with a "new" word!
The book in which I read it was different from the one mentioned in your article - this was "Right Ho, Jeeves".
Yes, I saw that definition of "cam" in Chambers.
I did not connect "irregular" with "eccentric" in that context...........
Of course, I should have done!
We are thinking of going shopping tomorrow for the remaining "bits and pieces".
Maybe Croydon?
On the tram?
I shall have to take the dog out first though.
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rusty

19th December 2017, 21:24
Hello, Elle!
There are lots of great words out there!
I think "hornswoggle" was used quite a bit in the old Western movies.
Yes, I agree, you should have got "cam"!
Hope you get on fine at Croydon.
My shopping is complete except for food, and I only have to please me, so that's fine!
I was browsing through my "history" on YouTube, and found one of my favourite BGT performers!
I don't know if you ever saw Lettice?
The kookiest dame ever on the show!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dxwPdWXL70g



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rosalind

19th December 2017, 21:32
How about "palimpsest" as an unusual word??
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