Sunday, July 05, 2026

NPR Sunday Puzzle (July 5, 2026): Marketing Buzzwords

NPR Sunday Puzzle (July 5, 2026): Marketing Buzzwords
Q: Name two words that are opposites. They share a single letter. Remove that shared letter from each word, put a hyphen between the two resulting words and you'll get a term you sometimes see in food ads. What are the original two words?
Take the hyphenated term and add the letters M and R. Rearrange to get something you don't want to see in your food.

16 comments:

  1. Change the last two letters of the first word to an internet term, and remove the space between the words. You’ll name a food product described by the ad term.

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  2. I was surprised how easy this turned out to be.

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  3. Easy, but it’s the sort of puzzle that makes me say, “Why didn’t I notice that before?” Remove the last letter from each of the two words of the food term. Rearrange what’s left. You get a food that in ordinary versions meets the description.

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  4. Insert a letter into one of the original words to get another pair of food related opposites.

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  5. And a musical clue: Simon and Garfunkel.

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    Replies
    1. I concur! The great thing about using that duo as a musical clue is that their catalog is so huge. The same is true about the Beatles (who also could provide the same clue).

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  6. this is a cute bit of wordplay, and I'm happy that many, many people will get the satisfaction of discovering it. The correct answer count might even exceed last week's "more than two thousand."

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  7. Easy puzzle, but https://www.npr.org/2026/07/05/g-s1-131765/sunday-puzzle-five-plus-two-two-plus-five currently significantly misstates it. Annoying.

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    Replies
    1. Whoa! good catch. Will and Blaine got it right, but some intern messed up again.

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    2. Will got it right on the air, but the way it's phased on the Web page is "The two starting words." It supposed to be the two remaining words. I know we're not supposed to criticize Will, but being a rebel and iconoclast, he uses the word "start" too much. As in "the start of the second word" "the start of the first word," etc.He should say beginning. It just sounds better.

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    3. Huh.
      It does to me, too.
      I wonder if that's a difference in dialect, though -- Will's a Hoosier, of course.
      Lots of style advice tells us to prefer Germanic to Latinate words when they're semantically equivalent, so that would speak in favor of 'start'.

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