Response to thumb-biting in Romeo and Juliet / SAT 3-18-23 / Trickster in Polynesian mythology / Name meaning long-lived in Arabic / That would change everything in internet lingo / Words that form other words when read backward / Citrus also known as uni (2024)

Constructor: Ada Nicolle

Relative difficulty: Easy

Response to thumb-biting in Romeo and Juliet / SAT 3-18-23 / Trickster in Polynesian mythology / Name meaning long-lived in Arabic / That would change everything in internet lingo / Words that form other words when read backward / Citrus also known as uniq fruit / French for canvas (1)

THEME: none

Word of the Day: SEMORDNILAPS(21D: Words that form other words when read backward) —

Response to thumb-biting in Romeo and Juliet / SAT 3-18-23 / Trickster in Polynesian mythology / Name meaning long-lived in Arabic / That would change everything in internet lingo / Words that form other words when read backward / Citrus also known as uniq fruit / French for canvas (2)

This is a close relative of the palindrome, a string of letters that reads the same backwards as forwards (“Madam, I’m Adam”; “A man, a plan, a canal: Panama!”; “Was it a car or a cat I saw?”).

In a semordnilap the text is likewise reversed but it must turn into something different. For example, if you reverse “diaper” you get “repaid”, and if you invert “desserts” the word “stressed” appears. A more complicated example is “deliver no evil”, but you can probably invent better ones for yourself.

As semordnilap is palindromes written backwards, it’s a self-referential word, one that encapsulates within itself the thing it represents. You could hardly say that it’s common, but many earnest palindromists have accidentally discovered it, and it has some small circulation among word wizards and elsewhere.

Derrida particularly favors the figure of a “headstrong dog,” possibly because dog, a semordnilap for god, helps him to configure an immanent versus transcendent ontology.Animal Capital: Rendering Life in Biopolitical Times, by Nicole Shukin, 2009. (World Wide Words) (my emph.)

• • •

Response to thumb-biting in Romeo and Juliet / SAT 3-18-23 / Trickster in Polynesian mythology / Name meaning long-lived in Arabic / That would change everything in internet lingo / Words that form other words when read backward / Citrus also known as uniq fruit / French for canvas (3)

I loved this puzzle, best puzzle I've done all week, except for two answers that ... well, I question their general familiarity.Really really question.They were fun to piece together, but seemed ... yeah, extremely off the beaten path. The first is the Word of the Day, SEMORDNILAPS, which, well, whoever coined that must really hate intelligibility because you cannot say it without sounding like you're trying to imitate some space alien language. Seems rather typical for a word nerd to prize cleverness ("it's PALINDROME backward, get it!") over functionality. It's actually an interesting phenomenon that should have a name, but this one is terrible. The only good thing about this name is that it helped me solve this crossword puzzle; that is, after a while, I realized that the gibberish I was looking at was going to be PALINDROME spelled backward (+ S). So I guess that counts as an "aha" moment, which is cool, but it was followed immediately by an "oh come on" moment. This is just another example of how, crossword / Wordle / Quordle obsession, I am actually an outsider in the world of Puzzle & Game People (the ones who Gotta Love 'Em All). The word "SEMORDNILAP(S)" was coined by a "recreational linguist" (!?) and only appeared in print for the first time in 1961 (and probably hasn't appeared much since). So ... I liked the "aha" moment and I liked learning a new *concept* but man I hate this word and also it is 100% obscure, if ever a word was obscure.


Also, to my mind, obscure, is the Romeo & Juliet quote (37A: Response to thumb-biting in "Romeo and Juliet" => "DO YOU QUARREL, SIR?"). Is this ... a famous quote? I could piece it together fairly easily, but ... is this just before Tybalt kills Mercutio (after Romeo steps in to try to stop the fight)? [looks it up] ... oof, no, it's from Act I scene i and is said by some minor character named Gregory (?!??!). I never teach this play, so the specifics are gone from my brain. Gregory? Gregory? Who is Gregory? How did this question become famous? Was there some pop culture moment that I missed, something that brought the quote to the forefront of general knowledge? Looks like "Gregory" is one of the Capulet servants and "has a tendency toward wordplay"—I wonder if he enjoys SEMORDNILAPS (or whatever they were calling them back then?). If I search "DO YOU QUARREL, SIR?" all the hits I get are just Shakespeare sites telling me it's from I.i of R&J. I can quote R&J a bunch, but this is not among the quotes I can quote. Luckily, this puzzle was so easy overall that neither of these (to me) obscurities created real trouble. And I learned a (terrible) word. And the Shakespeare quote is colorful and energetic, if nothing else, which brings me back to my initial point, which is that I loved this puzzle. More on that ... now.


I had NOEL for 1A: Merry air, but that got me nothing, so I wiped it and used LAGS and I'M IN to get LILT, and I was off like a shot. The Friday whoosh-whoosh feeling was in full effect for much of the solving experience. BIG IF TRUE! That was when I knew I was in. "I'M IN!" The fantastic juxtaposition of GET RICH QUICK and ATROCIOUS sent my hurtling down in the center, where HOT DOG BUN awaited me. STATS SANS STEP ended up being a staircase to the SE, which allowed DREAM TEAM to drop down and helped me pick up KETTLE DRUM and CHEAP DATE (great answers both). After working out the reverse palindrome thingie (can't bring myself to type that dumb word again), I just had those small corners in the NE and SW, and I was a little worried that they would somehow be my undoing (small corners on Saturdays can sneak up and kill you). But no. DRONE MUSIC before NOISE MUSIC (11D: Experimental nonmelodic genre), but OSLO took care of that. UNMOVABLE before IMMOVABLE ... shrug, not very interesting a mistake, but it happened. SW corner was easier. "MAY I COME IN?" (great answer) was too easy, and I had so much in place so quickly down there that ROSA PARKS went in without my even having to look at the clue. Wrote in the "B" in BIERS as my last letter and didn't get the "Congratulations!" messages, so panicked. After scanning the grid, I discovered an obvious typo (meant to type in METE and entered MENE (?) instead—I wish all mistakes were as easy to find as MENE crossing ISNN).


I knew MAUI because my wife is from NZ and "Polynesian mythology" is kinda in-the-general-culture down there (7D: Trickster in Polynesian mythology). I bought my daughter a picture book about the trickster MAUI when she was little. I didn't know a bunch of the other names in the grid today (NINA, EDDIE) but they were easy to get from crosses. No real trouble spots beyond the two big ones I've already covered. Overall, I just adored this one, and only wrote about the stuff I didn't like because my ignorance is more interesting (to me) than my prowess, and also I don't actually *hate* hate those two answers. They *do* involve two things I generally like (Shakespeare and wordplay). I just can't remember the last time I saw either a Shakespeare or a wordplay answer that was as ??? as those were. But if you're gonna expose me to obscurities, this is how you do it—make them at least colorful, and put them in a grid that is, in all other respects, a blast.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

Response to thumb-biting in Romeo and Juliet / SAT 3-18-23 / Trickster in Polynesian mythology / Name meaning long-lived in Arabic / That would change everything in internet lingo / Words that form other words when read backward / Citrus also known as uni (2024)

FAQs

What is the response to thumb biting in Romeo and Juliet crossword? ›

37A. “Response to thumb-biting in 'Romeo and Juliet'” is a reference to the very beginning of the Shakespeare play, and an early, more nuanced version of “you gotta problem?”: DO YOU QUARREL, SIR?

Why does Sampson bite his thumb at Abram? ›

- Sampson tries to provoke the servants of the Montague family by biting his thumb at them. - This is basically swearing at them. - He says that the Montagues will be disgraced (lose their honour) if they do not defend their honour after Sampson insults them.

What does thumb biting symbolize in Romeo and Juliet? ›

Biting your thumb—placing a thumb behind your front top teeth and then flicking it out—is a symbolic gesture similar to “flipping someone off.” The action is a silent and immature way to insult someone and could be interpreted as an invitation to violence.

How was biting your thumb an insult? ›

Biting the thumb

In Elizabethan England, this gesture was performed by placing the tip of the thumb behind the front teeth and flicking it forward. It can be interpreted as being equivalent to giving someone the middle finger or challenging to a fight. This version is still in use in some countries.

Do you bite your thumb at the US Sir Romeo and Juliet scene? ›

Abra : Do you bite your thumb at *us*, sir? Sampson : [to Gregory] Is the law of our side if I say aye? Gregory : NO! Sampson : No, sir, I do not bite my thumb at you, sir, but I bite my thumb, sir!

Where did I bite my thumb at you come from? ›

In Romeo and Juliet, which is set in Italy, he has a character who declares that he will 'bite [his] thumb at you', and in Henry V Pistol refers to the gesture known as 'the fig of Spain'.

What does biting your thumb mean in Italy? ›

Biting the hand

One of the common Italian hand gestures across the world—biting your hand or a finger is a great way to convey, you are holding up something you want to blurt out in anger.

Who says do you bite your thumb at me sir in Romeo and Juliet? ›

Abraham: Do you bite your thumb at us, sir? Sampson: I do bite my thumb, sir.

What is the effect of the Montague cousin biting his thumb at the Capulets? ›

Sampson bites his thumb at the Montagues—a highly insulting gesture. A verbal confrontation quickly escalates into a fight.

What was biting your thumb at someone in Elizabethan times similar to in modern times? ›

Biting your thumb in Shakespeare's era is equivalent to giving someone the middle finger nowadays.

How does Romeo react to Mercutio getting stabbed? ›

93–94). Enraged, Romeo declares that his love for Juliet has made him effeminate, and that he should have fought Tybalt in Mercutio's place.

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