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Page "Cryptic crossword" ¶ 184
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Some Related Sentences

Cryptics and often
Cryptics very often include anagrams.

Cryptics and have
Cryptics have a longer " learning curve " than standard crosswords as learning to interpret the different types of cryptic clues can take some practice.
The Cryptics have used their time in Hell to think.
They have no patience for the Cryptics, their goals are directly opposite to those of the Raveners, Reconcilers can be friend or foe, and they can work with Luciferans ( though they don't like to ).

Cryptics and .
Cryptics usually give the length of their answers in parentheses after the clue.
They dislike the Cryptics, can work with Faustians, consider the Reconcilers to be traitors, and consider Raveners to be enemies.
They are on good terms with the Cryptics and the Faustians, but are diametrically opposed to the goals of the Luciferans and the Raveners.

weekly and Spectator
The Spectator is a weekly British conservative magazine first published on 6 July 1828.
He published ( 1721 – 1723 ), in conjunction with Johann Jakob Breitinger and others, Die Discourse der Mahlern, a weekly journal after the model of The Spectator.
In his later years he expressed his views in a weekly journal, The Farmer ’ s Sun, and published in 1904 My Memory of Gladstone, while occasional letters to the Spectator showed that he had lost neither his interest in English politics and social questions nor his remarkable gifts of style.
This visit resulted in the publication in The Spectator of seven weekly letters, collected in book form at the end of 1847 ( see a letter to de Tocqueville in Mrs Grote's reprint of the Seven Letters, 1876 ).
In 1861 he joined Meredith Townsend as joint editor and part proprietor of the Spectator, then a well-known liberal weekly, but it did not pay.
In junior high school, he became a staff writer on The Spectator, the school newspaper, and at age 16, he wrote for the high school yearbook as well as editing a Boy Scout weekly, The Eagle Trail.
Her activities have been well-covered by the British tabloid press, and in the mid to late 1990s, she wrote a weekly column for the Sunday Times and subsequently contributed to The Spectator, The Mail on Sunday, GQ, Eve, Harpers and Queen, Tatler, Instyle and The Observer sporadically.
In London he edited a weekly gazette on the model of Joseph Addison's Spectator, Le Pour et contre, which he continued to produce, with short intervals, until 1740.
After Nicolson's last attempt to enter Parliament, he continued with an extensive social schedule and his programme of writing, which included books, book reviews, and a weekly column for The Spectator.
He has weekly columns in The Times and The Spectator magazine.
The Spectator, Hamilton College's primary news publication, is published weekly.
In 1995 he finally ended his long association with The Spectator, but in 1996 he rejoined The Sunday Telegraph, where he remained a weekly columnist until shortly before his death.
It is the second-oldest surviving weekly journal in Britain after The Spectator ( which was founded in 1828 ).
Neil began his professional writing career with the Spectator, a local free weekly, and began working for The News & Observer of Raleigh, North Carolina as a newsroom copy editor in 1989.
He has also written for various other newspapers, including The Wall Street Journal, the German daily Die Welt, the Swiss weekly Weltwoche, The Sunday Telegraph, The Catholic Herald, Freedom Today, the Brussels Journal and The Spectator.
From 1981 to 2009, Johnson wrote a column for the conservative British weekly magazine The Spectator ; initially focusing on media developments, it subsequently acquired the title " And Another Thing ".
The analysis from one of Erickson's " Morning Briefing " emails, just after the November 2009 election, was posted on the website of Human Events, referred to on the website of The American Spectator, and by Rush Limbaugh, and " fueled discussion later that morning at two influential weekly meetings of D. C. conservatives ", according to an article in the Washington Post.
Levin reviewed television for The Manchester Guardian and wrote a weekly political column in The Spectator noted for its irreverence.
The proprietor and editor of the long-established weekly The Spectator, Ian Gilmour, invited Levin to join his staff.
He returned to the UK in 2000 and is currently an associate editor of The Spectator, where he writes a weekly column, and a political columnist for The Sun on Sunday.
Walgett publishes a weekly newspaper called the ' Walgett Spectator '.
Eagle Publications also owned several weekly and specialty publications, including the Connecticut Valley Spectator of Lebanon, New Hampshire, the Message for the Week of Chester, Vermont, the Weekly Flea, and the Argus Champion.
In the mid-70s he contributed a regular quiz to Melvyn Bragg's BBC literary programme Read All About It, and he returned to The Spectator as a weekly contributor ( 1976 – 1981 ), when he also became a lead book-reviewer for The Sunday Telegraph.
James writes a weekly food column for The Sun and also contributes to a number of other British newspapers including The Independent, The Observer, The Times, and The Sunday Times, as well as Q magazine, The Spectator and The Idler.

weekly and often
The tasks are designed to test their teamwork abilities and community spirit, and in some countries the housemates ' shopping budget or weekly allowance often depends on the outcome of any given tasks.
From the mid-1940s through the early 1950s, he and Blair organized weekly parties at their Beverly Hills home, and they often played an intensely competitive and physical version of charades, known as " The Game ".
Diaries and calendars often include quotations for entertainment or inspirational purposes, and small, dedicated sections in newspapers and weekly magazines — with recent quotations by leading personalities on current topics — have also become commonplace.
Most Christians do not observe a Saturday Shabbat, but instead observe a weekly day of worship on Sunday, which is often called the " Lord's Day ".
Also, Fox programming has been chosen by the PTC for its weekly " Worst TV Show of the Week " feature more often than programming from any other broadcast network.
North American Radio stations often play specialty radio shows such as Casey Kasem's countdown or other nationally syndicated radio shows that may differ from their regular weekly music patterns on Sunday morning and / or Sunday evening.
While many of the episodes originate from St. Paul, the show often travels to other cities around the U. S. and overseas for its live weekly broadcasts.
The WWWF operated in a conservative matter compared to other pro wrestling territories ; it ran its major arenas monthly rather than weekly or bi-weekly, usually featuring a babyface champion wrestling various heels in programs consisting of one to three matches, with the initial meeting often featuring a heel win in a non-decisive manner.
Accounts of Van Vliet's precocious achievement in art often include his statement that he sculpted on a weekly television show.
Barker failed to get into the Young Vic School, but joined the Manchester Repertory Company, which was based in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, often taking comic roles in their weekly shows.
Although he was able to participate in activities like parasailing during the group ’ s trip to Hawaii, the cast grew more worried about him nonetheless, often covering up for him during their weekly " confessional " interviews with the producers by telling them that Zamora was doing fine when they knew otherwise.
In addition to writing and making appearances on behalf of the Downsize DC Foundation ( an organization he helped to co-found and for which he served as Director of Public Policy for a year and a half ), he hosted two weekly network radio shows, one on Saturdays dealing with politics, which he often called “ The Libertarian Conversation ” ( since listeners were encouraged to call in ), and the other on Sundays, called " The Money Show ", dealing with financial topics.
Summer tourism is often based on the Turtle Flambeau Flowage and other bodies of water, such as Tank Lake ( Grand Portage Lake ), former home to weekly water ski shows and site of a public beach.
Most products, such as Cookie Crisp and Chex cereals ( when they were produced by Ralston ), would often alternate weekly or monthly.
Since the late 2000s, after the channel struck a deal with DreamWorks Animation in 2006 to develop the studio's animated films into weekly series, the channel often can be compared to Cartoon Cartoons from Cartoon Network.
* Committees may meet on a regular basis, often weekly or yearly, or meetings may be called irregularly as the need arises.
Pub quizzes ( also known as live trivia, or table quizzes ) are often weekly events and will have an advertised start time, most often in the evening.
The term was often considered pejorative, especially by the English weekly music press who considered the movement as ineffectual, and it was disliked by many of the groups it purported to describe,
These include: Sprouts, a weekly showcase of producers and stations around the network, often in documentary format ; Explorations in Science with Dr. Michio Kaku, a weekly radio program on science, politics, and the environment ; Dennis Bernstein's Flashpoints a daily drive-time public affairs program ; and many other regular programs.
Lewis-Smith started writing weekly columns in Time Out magazine where he took over from Julie Burchill, the short-lived Sunday Correspondent, and The Mail on Sunday ( where he often substituted for Burchill ) as well as Esquire magazine.
Another of his shows is Sekai Marumie (" The World Exposed "), a weekly collection of various interesting video clips from around the world, often focusing on the weird aspects of other countries, and with a regular section on daring rescues, taken from the American program Rescue 911.
There are several market research practices that may be used: ( 1 ) concept testing, which evaluates reactions to a film idea and is fairly rare ; ( 2 ) positioning studios, which analyze a script for marketing opportunities ; ( 3 ) focus groups, which probe viewers ' opinions about a film in small groups prior to release ; ( 4 ) test screenings, which involve the previewing of films prior to theatrical release ; ( 5 ) tracking studies, which gauge ( often by telephone polling ) an audience's awareness of a film on a weekly basis prior to and during theatrical release ; ( 6 ) advertising testing, which measures responses to marketing materials such as trailers and television advertisements ; and finally ( 7 ) exit surveys, that measure audience reactions after seeing the film in the cinema.

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