Cryptic Puzzle

Love Triangles

Love Triangles

By Tom Toce

I’m a casualty actuary; I love triangles. The diagram has 49 small triangles. The clues lead to nine-letter answers, which (scrambled) will fit into the larger 1-3-5 triangles with apexes 1 through 15. Several of the small triangles will be used in multiple answers, some will be used in just two answers, and six will be used just once. The letters in these six small triangles, read from top to bottom, left to right, will spell out a pertinent characteristic. (The six letters are really three pairs and each pair can go two ways, but of the eight possibilities, only one spells a real word.)

As a solving aid, and a means to ensure that the grid can be filled in only one way, I have provided these starting letters: PLUG SOS.

All the entries are playable in Scrabble. Clue six involves an alternate spelling. Ignore punctuation, which is intended to deceive.

Thanks to Bob Fink and Jerry Miccolis for test-solving and editorial suggestions. And a final thank you to Eric Klis, who provided valuable advice for many years.

  1. Novice ruthlessly outplans to a T
  2. Turncoat’s at the center of crapola situations
  3. Metals provide all that’s needed for an impasse
  4. Indiscriminately faithless and most vulgar
  5. Foolhardy attempt taken by Eilish after I left show
  6. The first person to be pleasant in Paris turned dry in French milieus
  7. Total disasters at fulsome preparations
  8. Someone who can open doors may come as a terrible shock, Milt
  9. Hydrophobia draws an injection by a marvelous doctor in some nursery rhymes
  10. Single examples of nonagon bisectors and congruence are covered by Euclid or Pythagoras
  11. Uneasy as some Anabaptists follow grotesque faction
  12. Despicable as hate looms all over
  13. Whatchamacallit tuxedo accessory receives an expression of amazement
  14. Boy, Drake’s otherworldly on piano and synthesizers
  15. Releases captivating work unit for Bears

TOM TOCE is an FCAS and a senior manager at EY. He is a member of the Jeopardy Hall of Fame. Solutions may be emailed to ttoce@nyc.rr.com. In order to make the solver list, you should send him your solutions by April 1, 2024.

Solution to Previous Issue’s Puzzle—Longer Lines at the Movies

Across

11. WOLF—FLOW reversal

15. INSPIRATION—Double definition

16. MOVER—M + OVER

17. MAESTRO—“some art” anagram

18. IMPULSE—IMP + UL + SitE

23. LOTUSES—LOT + USES

26. ALLEGRO—“Al Gore” + L anagram

29. DRIVE-THRU   D + RIVET + HR + U

34. DIVAN—Audi vans

35. BARROW—BAR+ROW

37. LURIDNESS—“runs deli’s” anagram

39. LANCER—Catalan ceramic

43. ARMED—“Dream” anagram

49. TERMINATE—TERM + INNATE – N

51. CRYSTAL—CRYing veSTAL

52. AQUATIC—A + QUA + TIC

58. SHIPPED—SHI(PP)ED

61. EGGHEAD—EG + G + HE + AD

63. RUMBA—Rhythm Upset My Balancing Act initial letters

64. GALLIVANTED—G + AL + LIV + ANTED

65. SERF—SURF homophone

Down

 1. INITIALLY—IN IT + I + ALLY

 2. AESOP—AES + OP

 3. TRIFLES—TRI(P—>F)LES

 4. ORATE—O + RATE

 5. EVIL—LIVE reversal

 6. LANDS—AL reversal + NDS

 7. NYMPH—NY + MPH

 8. REVISIONS—REV + IS + IONS

 9. NOR—RON reversal

10. ELM—Velma

12. OUTRE—“route” anagram

13. FRONTRUNNER—FoRlOrN sTaRtUp NoN-mEtRo

14. SEINFELD—“ends life” anagram

20. END—“needed” reverse letter bank

21. VOIGHT—V (E—>O)IGHT

22. MAGNOLIA—“Main goal” anagram

24. TAU—T + A + U

25. SALE—SAIL homophone

27. LATER—Gore talked reversal

28. GRANDDADDY—GRAND + ADD + Y

30. HAVOC—geisha vocation

32. HMO—Satchmo

33. UNSEEMLY—UN + SEE + M + LiffeY

35. BEASTLINESS—BE(A)STLINE(S)S

36. RUMOR—ROOMER homophone

38. EXACT—EX + ACT

40. ALA—Double definition

41. IGUANA—Innocent Geckos Until Alligators Nestle Alongside initial letters

42. MYNA—MINOR in dialect

44. DRIVELED—DR(IVEL)ED “Levi” reversal

46. EXCLAIMED—“a mild exec” anagram

47. BAT—Double definition

48. DECIDEDLY—DEC + IDED + LilY

50. ELK—ELKe

53. UNITARD—UNIT + tARDy

55. LAGER—REGAL reversal

56. KNAVE—NAVE homophone

57. NIGHT—NIGH + T

58. STILL—Double definition

59. PETAL—PET + AL

60. CLUE—Double definition/pun

62. DUO—arduous

63. RAH—RA + H

Solvers

Steve Alpert, Katie Anderson, Dean Apps, Jack Brauner , Bob Campbell, Lois Cappellano, Laura Cremerius, Jared Dashoff, Todd Dashoff, Christopher Dickens, Mick Diede, Dave Dougherty, Deb Edwards, Jess Feinman, Phil Gollance, Jason Helbraun, Pete Hepokoski, Catharine Hornby and Bruce Harvey, Max Jackson, Ruth Johnson, Mike Kosciuk, Ken Kudrak, Ben Lynch, Mathew Marchione and Marika Brown, Dave McGarry, Jon Michelson, Jim Muza, David and Corinne Promislow, Ram Raman, Jay Ripps, John Salciccioli, Giacomo Santangelo, Dan Schwallie, Bill Scott, Zig Swistunowicz, T. O. C. E. (Josh DenHartog and Sean Donohoe), Betsy and James Uzzell, Bonnie Veenschoten

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