The name's William Ernest Butler, but please call me Bill. I grew up in Ireland, but now live out here in the San Francisco Bay Area. I'm retired now, from technology businesses that took our family all over the world. I answer all emails, so please feel free to email me at bill@paxient.comIf you are working on the New York Times crossword in any other publication, you are working on the syndicated puzzle. Here is a link to my answers to today's SYNDICATED New York Times crossword. To find any solution other than today's, enter the crossword number (e.g. 1225, 0107) in the "Search the Blog" box above.
This is my solution to the crossword published in the New York Times today ...
Completion Time: 7m 59s
Theme: KEEP ... The word KEEP can precede either halves of the starred clues, e.g. COUNTDOWN (KEEP COUNT, KEEP DOWN).
Answers I missed: 0
TODAY'S WIKI-EST GOOGLIES
Across
9 -ESQUE: The suffice -esque came into English from Italian (-esco), which in turn derives from Latin (-iscus).
15 IDEA: If "necessity is the mother of invention", I guess an idea is its child!
19 ALICE: "Alice's Restaurant Masacree
20 HESSIAN: The Hessians
28 TAO: The Chinese character "tao" translates as "path", but the concept of Tao
36 IRA: Roth Individual Retirement Accounts
44 ADELE: Adele Astaire
63 LARS: "Lars and the Real Girl
66 ARTY: Someone who is "chichi" is showily trendy and pretentious.
Down
10 SALINAS: The Salinas Valley
22 ADOLF: The names Adolf (in Germany) and Adolphe (in France) are dying out, with very few babies being given the name since the days of Nazi Germany.
26 DONNE: I don't know about here in America, but at school in Ireland we all had to learn John Donne
31 TIDAL: A tidal basin is an area that fills with water at high tide, and then that water level is maintained by artificial means. I used to live in a village on the East Coast of Ireland where there was a salt water swimming pool that would be filled by the high tide twice a day, the same principle I guess.
38 AD HOC: The Latin phrase "ad hoc" means "for this purpose".
51 SNERT: "Hagar the Horrible
52 INUIT: The Inuit
50 LOO: When I was growing up in Ireland, a "bath-room" was the room that had the bath and no toilet. The separate room with the toilet was called "the toilet" or sometimes the W.C., the water closet. Apparently the term closet was used because in the 1800s as toilets moved indoors they often displaced clothes in a "closet", as a closet was just the right size to take the commode. It has been suggested that the British term "loo" comes from Waterloo (water-closet ... water-loo), but no one seems to know for sure.



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