Two amazing entry/clue pairings:
- BIENVENUE is a delightful word. Not as delightful as the misdirect in [Welcome abroad], leading me to ask myself, what's a word to take in a foreign exchange student?
- [Digital filing service?] needed a telltale question mark, but that didn't stop me from enjoying the wordplay. Fingers and toes = digits!
In our weekly puzzle chat, Jim Horne and I shared a laugh about YEAHAND. We rarely agree fully on anything, but neither of us could wrap our brains around this one. The YEAHAND is the opposite of the NAYHAND? Perhaps it's a cousin to YAHEARD with Perd?
(It's YEAH ... AND? A solid entry, albeit strange-looking without that ellipsis.)
I used to think all weird-looking entries were cool, but I've heard enough solver feedback on things like SANDP, EINK, and MESAAZ to adjust my scoring principles.
Jim and I appropriately agreed on another entry; WOULDN'T YOU AGREE? Yes, we would!
Not so much on THIS GUY GETS IT, which this guy didn't. I do think it's a fine entry, but it feels oddly specific. I asked Jim to give me an example of the phrase in use, and twenty minutes later, Marie Antoinette pointed to Marc Anthony (the Shakespeare character, not the singer, of course) and said CE GARS, L'OBTIENT.
(It appears that Jimmy Fallon uses this phrase a lot, so the issue is more my obtuse refusal to acknowledge things that make me feel old.)
ESCOOTER … I have seen these littered about my neighborhood, people zooming by on sidewalks, eliciting fist-shaking from a grumpy old man spying at intruders from my doorstep. It's a curious entry, one part modern, and one part head-shaking-at-yet-another-e-addition-phrase.
(This, from someone who says E-TAILER and E-COMMERCE all the time.)
Only vaguely recognizing HADID and EGAN nearly hadid me in, but thankfully I recognized Christine LAHTI. Less fortunate was Jim, to whom I had to explain what a NOOGIE was. My phone literally swayed from the breeze generated by Jim shaking his head at us crazy Yanks.
Overall, some head-cocking moments, but enough strong entries and clever wordplay to make the solve worth it.