Hopefully you could see that the words "Sweet Dreams" were filled with the word "This" repeatedly. Once you caught that, then the only thing left was to figure out what it meant. This time it was a song title - "Sweet Dreams Are Made Of This" by the Eurythmics. Words within words are pretty easy to come up with, so keep looking for the hidden words. Sort of like "Hidden in plain si
0 Comments
Two weeks with no winners. This puzzle was really hard. So, my thought process was like this: On the left side, all of the multiplication or TIMES problems were correct. It couldn't get any better. In fact, you could say "It was the best of times." Do I need to explain the right side? The famous literary quote is from "A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens. In fact, that whole first paragraph has some good "What in the World" puzzles hiding in it. In fact, I was here. I don't think anyone had trouble reading the word "concert" even thought he O was replaced. I think the trouble may have come in recognizing that the O was replaced by a picture of the back of a US nickle. Which makes this week's "What in the World" answer "Nickleback in concert". For what it's worth, I seem to be stumbling on a bunch of music references to make into puzzles. So stay tuned for more (pun intended). With only one winner last week, I'm leaving the puzzle up for a second week. Next week I'll explain the answer for at least one of the puzzles.
There were many incorrect guesses last week such as "A penny for your thoughts" (Good, but no thought bubbles) "Money Talks" (Too broad. This is more specific). So I have decided to put this one back in the "Ready To Use" folder for another day. Meanwhile, keep the comments coming here. Maybe someone will actually get it right. Since there was only one winner last week, I have to wonder if I made this too hard. So, the thought process goes like this. There's a list of All the Presidents along with the international symbol for MEN. Put them together and you have All the Presidents Men the title of the book by Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward So how come there was only one winner last week? |
What in the World
Linguistic Illusions to challenge adults and children. Archives
December 2016
Categories
All
|