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Stargaze Bingo

First Wayback Machine entry was on Tuesday, August 7, 2018 with the last entry on Sunday, November 25, 2018 with 3 total snapshots

ENTRY 3: Week 18 (2/3)

Quiz #1: My picks for “Bingo of the Week” honors go to the two ‘Z’ bingos: Steve’s MIDSIZED and Zach’s STARGAZE. Within the word MIDSIZED there are only two 7’s: MIDSIZE (which only takes the -D hook) and MIDDIES. Aside from a ‘Z’, only an ‘A’ can combine with the letters in MIDDIES to form an 8-letter bingo. What is that bingo?

Bingo

Stargaze Bingo Meaning

Quiz #2: Zach’s bingo STARGAZE takes three back-hooks: -D, -R, and -S. There are only two 7-letter words within STARGAZE, and they are anagrams of each other. So, drop the ‘Z’ in STARGAZE, and then find the two bingos in the very common letters AAEGRST.

Quiz #3: AAEGRST is such a good rack that many other letters combine to form 8-letter bingos. So, aside from STARGAZE, can you find the ten other 8-letter bingos in AAEGRST + a blank? Hint: the combining letters are: A, C, D, L, M (2 bingos), N, S, T, and V.

Quiz #4: Honorable mention for Larry’s bingo SOLUNAR. Despite all the 1-point tiles in SOLUNAR, not everyone knows this word. OSPD defines it as: “listing the rising and setting times of the sun and moon [adj]”. But, it appears their definition omitted the first 3 words, and it most likely should read: “Pertaining to tables listing the rising and setting times of the sun and moon”. My quiz question is: What are the 8-letter bingos in SOLUNAR + C (2 bingos), + E (also 2 bingos), + G, and + J ?

Quiz #5: LUNAR is a noun, and so takes the -S plural. If you had a rack consisting of LUNARS + a blank, how many 7-letter bingos (besides SOLUNAR, of course) can you find?

Quiz #6: Another Honorable Mention goes to Satya for his bingo UNVIABLE. Let’s drop the ‘U’ and just play with the letters NVIABLE. Besides ‘U’, can you find the four other 8-letter bingos in NVIABLE + a blank? Hint: the combining letters are: E, I, T, and Y.

Quiz #7: Larry played YARDAGES, which has a more obscure anagram in DRAYAGES. My final quiz question is this: Besides an ‘S’, what is the only other letter that can combine with the tiles in YARDAGE/DRAYAGE to form an 8-letter bingo, and what is that bingo?

SOLUTIONS:CLICK HERE

ENTRY #2: Week 17 (1/27)

Congratulations to Sarah for being the Week #17 winner…her second victory in a row! I was absent at Club last night in order to attend my annual HOA meeting. Unfortunately, Linda and I will also miss the next 2 weeks due to conflicts we have with our theater ushering assignments.

Full

But, regardless, the Bingo Blog forges onward. Your challenge is to solve the quizzes below, which are based on last night’s bingos. All solutions are given at the bottom. Feel free to comment, and give me a “like” if you want this blog to continue.

Quiz #1: My pick for “Bingo of the Week” goes to Karin’s DUNKINGS. It’s one of the new words ending in -INGS, and would very likely draw a challenge from an opponent who hasn’t studied the new -INGS words.

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Okay, let’s test your knowledge of 8-letter words ending in –KINGS. In the list below, which of these 20 words are valid and which are phonies? BUNKINGS JUNKINGS BORKINGS BROKINGS CORKINGS LINKINGS PINKINGS SINKINGS LOCKINGS ROCKINGS SOAKINGS SACKINGS COCKINGS DOCKINGS SOCKINGS SUCKINGS SEEKINGS SHAKINGS TANKINGS TUCKINGS.

Quiz #2: I’ll give an “Honorable Mention” to Satya’s bingo: AQUIFER. Of course it takes the -S plural, but my quiz question is this: What is the only other letter that the tiles in AQUIFER combine with to form an 8-letter bingo? HINT: It’s a new word.

Quiz #3: Another “Honorable Mention” to Larry’s NEMATODE, “a kind of worm”. Within this 8-letter word there are just two 7-letter words, and both use the same letters: DEEMNOT. What are these two anagrams? HINT: One of them is a new word.

Quiz #4: Sarah played the phony (luminas), which I’ve seen used before. LUMINA is good, but it is already a plural (of LUMEN), so no -S hook. My question is: What letters can be hooked onto LUMINA (either front or back) to form valid words?

Quiz #5: With a rack consisting of LUMINA? (in other words, LUMINA + a blank), there are a total of ten 7-letter bingos, using 10 different letters: A, B, C, D, E G, L, P, R, and S. How many of these 10 bingos can you find?

Quiz #6: Bonnie played the phony (donners), which has also appeared in games I’ve seen before. Although (donner) is itself a phony, there are 2 different letters that can back-hook to (donner) and form legitimate words. What are they?

SOLUTIONS:CLICK HERE

ENTRY #1: Week 16 (1/20)

With the encouragement and endorsement of our hard-working director, Larry Rand, this will be my first in a series of blogs for the PHXSC123 email list and the Phoenix Scrabble Club’s Facebook site. My intention is to make this a regular column (perhaps weekly, if my schedule permits), in which I share with you my thoughts (and 50+ years of Scrabble experience) about some of the bingos played (or even missed!) at our most recent session.
Consider this blog as a supplement to Larry’s weekly bingo report, in which he lists all of our bingos (including phonies), and then painstakingly adds front-hooks, back-hooks, anagrams, double-doubles, triple-triples, prize-winning words-of-the-week, and even % symbols to identify the “new words”. My goal is to make this blog entertaining, enlightening, and educational. In other words, have fun solving the quizzes I present below and you might even find that your scores improve too!

Quiz #1: (All quiz solutions will be printed at the bottom of each blog) When Larry listed my phony (resliced) in his report, he forgot to include its valid anagram. Despite its common-looking, bingo-prone tiles, it is a somewhat uncommon word. Do you know it?

Quiz #2: My actual rack before I played the above phony was CDEEILS. There is a bingo in those tiles, which wouldn’t fit on the board. Do you see it?

Quiz #3: There are several letters (besides the ’R’ from Quiz #1) that combine with the rack CDEEILS to form valid 8-letter bingos. None of these letters were available in my game (vs. Martin), but try to find these ordinary bingos anyway: CDEEILS + B; +H; +N (3 bingos); +P (3 bingos).

Quiz #4: Each report will contain my personal selection for “Bingo of the Week”. To qualify, the winning bingo should impress me by being low-probability, hard-to-find, or esoteric. Perhaps it could be a 9-letter or longer bingo, or just one that would elicit oohs and aahs from the crowd (if crowd noise were permitted at Club, that is!).

As it happens, the bingos in Week 16 were quite mundane. So, I will give an “Honorable Mention” to Karen’s ACIERATE, a verb meaning: “to turn into steel”. Within ACIERATE is the adjective ACERATE, meaning: “needle-shaped”. ACERATE is a handy word to know because its tiles are quite common and may appear in your games. Also, your unsuspecting opponent may decide to add an “S” to pluralize it, in which case you gleefully challenge it off the board. So, my quiz question is this…what letters do combine with ACERATE to form valid 8-letter bingos?

Quiz #5: I’ll end this debut issue with my personal “Fail of the Week”. (Yes, even I screw up… a lot more than I care to admit!) Going first against Sarah, with an opening rack of AELTUY?, I failed to find the only bingo. It’s not an unusual word…so, can you spot it?

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SOLUTIONS:CLICK HERE