Wednesday: Revealed, then Revealed Again - 5 February 2025 New York Times Crossword
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- Опубліковано 4 лют 2025
- Today's Wednesday themed puzzle started and ended with some resistance for me-fortunately, the bits in between were smoother. How did you fare? Join me for the solve! - If you'd like to directly support this channel, consider signing up to my Patreon to receive exclusive bonus content: / dailysolve
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This is the New York Times crossword puzzle for Wednesday, 5 February 2025:
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The Open Era in tennis is when professionals were allowed to compete with amateurs. Previously the tournaments know at The Grand Slam were amateur only.
ASCII is still used, since Unicode takes up more space in memory, so when there are no special characters you don't want to be using useless space in memory
I fondly remember my handy ASCII table pocket card from my college days in the 1980s! LOL
Good solve as always, Chris. I made the same "Ethan" entry for 10 D, cost me a minute or so. 13.54 for me, a bit off what I would want for a Wednesday, but I'll fall back on the "I was on my first cup of coffee" excuse. :)
Almost the exact same clue was in the puzzle very recently (with a third actor's last name) so that's why I knew it immediately
@@adamventures13 I'm stickin' with the "paucity of coffee" defense!
@@adamventures13 I remember.
Can someone explain, why is there no abbreviation indicators for sgtpepper and ump ? also isnt Dahl meant to have a h
Taking a stab at that. 1) abbreviated terms whose usage is high gradually become regarded as complete words, as in ump. And Sgt. Pepper is an album title, you're not likely to come across Sergeant Pepper, spelled out. 2) Later in the week puzzles (gradually harder) tend to have fewer qualifiers in the clues.
I, too, am used to the dahl spelling, though that transliteration has become obsolete.
and potentially 'sec' as well