Some themed answers only make sense when we take a SHIP OUT, and others when we add a SHAPE to the end, in the UP-direction:
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
9 Black Friday destination : MALL
Surprisingly (to me!), our word “mall”, meaning “shady walk” or “enclosed shopping space”, comes from the Italian for “mallet”. All of our shopping-style malls are named for “The Mall” in St. James’s Park in London. This tree-lined promenade was so called as it used to be a famous spot to play the croquet-like game called “pall-mall”. The game derived its name from the Italian for ball (palla) and mallet “maglio”. The London thoroughfare called the Mall still exists, at one end of which is Buckingham Palace. Indeed, parallel to the Mall is a street called Pall Mall.
In the world of retail, Black Friday is the day after Thanksgiving in the US. It is also the day when many stores start the holiday shopping season, and so offer deep discounts to get ahead of the competition.
17 Anatomical part from the Latin for “grape” : UVEA
The uvea is the middle of the three layers that make up the eyeball. The outer layer is called the fibrous tunic, and the inner layer is the retina.
18 Mashhad’s country : IRAN
The city of Mashhad is in the northeast of Iran, and is the second-most populous city in the country after Tehran.
19 Portrayer of Mrs. Smith in 2005’s “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” : JOLIE
Angelina Jolie is a remarkably successful Hollywood actress from Los Angeles, California. Jolie has acting in her blood as her father is actor Jon Voight. Her godparents are actors Jacqueline Bisset and Maximilian Schell. Jolie’s first marriage was to British actor Jonny Lee Miller, who plays Sherlock Holmes on the TV show “Elementary”. Her second marriage was to actor Billy Bob Thornton, and the third to actor Brad Pitt.
“Mr. & Mrs. Smith” is a 2005 film starring Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie in the title roles. It’s a fun film, sort of a melded romantic comedy and action movie. The film is noted as the first time Pitt and Jolie met, after which they fell in love and became the media’s “Brangelina” item.
20 Cheer for a diva : BRAVA!
To express appreciation for a male performer at an operatic performance, traditionally one calls out “bravo!”. Appreciation for a female performer is shown by using “brava!”, and for more than one performer of either sex by using “bravi!”
21 Filipino meat dish : BEEF ADOBO
Philippine adobo is sometimes cited as the country’s national dish. The term “adobo” comes from the Spanish “adobar” meaning “marinade, sauce” The marinade used comprises vinegar, soy sauce, garlic, bay leaves and black peppercorns.
23 Sumatran swinger : ORANG
Orangutans (also “orangs”) are arboreal creatures, the largest arboreal animals known to man. They are native to Indonesia and Malaysia, and live in rainforests. Like most species in rainforests these days, orangutans are endangered, with only two species surviving. The word “orangutan” is Malay, meaning “man of the forest”.
Sumatra is a very large island in western Indonesia. It is the sixth largest island in the world and home to 22% of the country’s population.
24 Shoelace protector : AGLET
An aglet is a plastic or metal sheath found on the end of a shoelace or perhaps a drawstring. The name “aglet” comes from the Old French word “aiguillette” meaning “needle”.
26 Sue Bird or Larry Bird : BASKETBALL STAR (ending with “STAR” UP)
WNBA player Sue Bird is one of only two basketball players, male or female, to have won five Olympic gold medals. The other is fellow WNBA star Diana Taurasi. Bird became engaged to US soccer phenom Megan Rapinoe in 2020.
Larry Bird played basketball for the Boston Celtics from 1978 to 1992. Bird has a lot of very loyal fans, and some might even be described as fanatical. In 2005 an Oklahoma City man was convicted of a crime involving a shooting. On being sentenced to 30 years imprisonment, the guilty man requested that the sentence be changed to 33 years so that it matched the number on Larry Bird’s jersey. The judge obliged. Or so the story goes …
28 Part of a certain chain : DAISY
The flowers of the daisy plant close tightly at sunset and then open up again in the morning. It is this behavior that led to the name “daisy”, from the Old English for “day’s eye”. So, the daisy could be called a “well-rested” plant. And, someone who is well-rested attacks the day “fresh as a daisy”. Interesting, huh?
30 Sound from a cappuccino maker : HISS
The Order of Friars Minor Capuchin is an order of Roman Catholic friars, an offshoot of the Franciscans. The order split from the Franciscans back in 1520, and were forced to go into hiding from church authorities. The new order was helped by the Camaldolese monks, and in recognition of their assistance, the breakaway monks adopted the Camaldolese hood, known as a capuccio. It is this “capuccio” that gave the order its name, and indeed ultimately gave the name to the Capuchin monkey. The cappuccino coffee is named for the coffee-and-white colored habits worn by Capuchin friars.
32 Tikka masala go-with : NAAN
The word “tikka” in Indian cuisine refers to a small cutlet or croquette.
“Masala” is a Hindi word meaning “spice mixture”. A dish named “masala” uses the spices incorporated into a sauce that includes garlic, ginger, onions and chili paste. Who doesn’t love Indian cuisine? Yum …
33 The Tabard, in “The Canterbury Tales” : INN
Tabards were tunics worn by knights over their armor. Often, the tabard was quite colorful and was emblazoned with the knight’s coat of arms. It was this usage of the word “tabard” that gave rise to the Tabard inn, which features in Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Canterbury Tales”.
“The Canterbury Tales” is a collection of stories penned by Geoffrey Chaucer at the end of the 14th century. Written in MIddle English, the tales are presented as a storytelling contest held by a group of pilgrims as they travel from London to the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. “The Canterbury Tales” is often cited as a landmark piece of English literature as it popularized the use of vernacular English, as opposed to the French or Latin works that were commonly published up to that time.
34 Echelon : TIER
We use the word “echelon” (ech.) to describe a rank or level, particularly in the military. The term comes from French, in which language it has the same meaning, although the original meaning in Old French is “rung of a ladder”.
38 Former roles for Kamala Harris and Arlen Specter, for short : DAS
Kamala Harris was a US Senator for California starting in 2017, after serving for six years as the Attorney General of California. In early 2019, Harris announced her run for the Democratic nomination for US president in the 2020 election. Although she dropped out of the race, she was chosen by eventual nominee Joe Biden as his vice-presidential running mate. When the Biden-Harris ticket won the election, Harris became the first female US vice president, and the highest-ranking female politician in the history of the nation.
Arlen Specter was the US Senator for Pennsylvania, famous for switching from the Republican to the Democratic Party in 2009. In 2010 he lost the Democratic primary and his seat went to Pat Toomey, a Republican. Spector developed a reputation for himself of being hard to work with over the years, earning the nickname “Snarlin’ Arlen”.
42 Avocado toast topper, perhaps : EGG
Avocado toast is trendy, but delicious. My homemade version includes a generous sprinkling of freshly cracked black pepper, and a splash of hot sauce. Yum …
43 Like the main character in “Memento” : AMNESIC
“Amnesia”, meaning “loss of memory”, is a Greek word that we imported into English in the 17th century. The Greek term comes from combining the prefixes “a-” meaning “not” and “mnesi-” meaning “remembering”.
“Memento” is a 2000 mystery movie with an interesting storyline. Guy Pearce stars as a man suffering from short-term memory loss after an attack by two men who raped and killed his wife. He searches for the killers, and is forced to use tattoos and polaroids to track information that he knows he will not recall.
45 Pension alternative, in brief : IRA
A pension is a fund into which people make payments, usually during their working lives. In return, anyone who contributed receives periodic payments after retirement. In the US, Social Security is the most widely available pension.
55 Queequeg’s figurine in “Moby-Dick,” e.g. : IDOL
Queequeg is a character in Herman Melville’s classic tale “Moby Dick”. Queequeg is the chief harpooner on the boat. He is also the son of a South Sea chieftain, and a cannibal who is covered in tattoos.
57 Fair-hiring inits. : EEO
“Equal Employment Opportunity” (EEO) is a term that has been around since 1964 when the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) was set up by the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title VII of the Act prohibits employers from discriminating against employees on the basis of sex, race, color, national origin or religion.
58 Like Hadrian’s Wall in northern England : ROMAN
The Roman Emperor Hadrian is best remembered today for building Hadrian’s Wall, a barrier marking the northern limit of Roman Britain. Construction of the stone wall started in AD 122, and the end result was the most fortified border in the whole of the Roman Empire. Much of Hadrian’s Wall can still be seen today, and I’ve had the privilege of walking along part of it when visiting Northern England.
64 Nickname : DUB (DUBLINER with “LINER” OUT)
Kneel, and a monarch might “dub thee a knight” if you’re lucky. “Dub” is a specific term derived from Old English that was used to mean “make a knight”. As the knight was also given a knightly name at the same time, “dub” came to mean “give someone a name”.
66 El ___ (Castilian hero) : CID
Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar was known as El Cid Campeador, which translates as “The Champion” or perhaps “The Lord, Master of Military Arts”. El Cid was a soldier who fought under the rule of King Alfonso VI of Spain (among others). However, he was sent into exile by the King in 1080, after acting beyond his authorization in battle. El Cid then offered his services to his former foes, the Moorish kings, After a number of years building a reputation with the Moors, he was recalled from exile by Alfonso. By this time El Cid was very much his own man. Nominally under the orders of Alfonso, he led a combined army of Spanish and Moorish troops and took the city of Valencia on the Mediterranean coast in 1094, making it his headquarters and home. He died in Valencia, quite peacefully, in 1099.
The Kingdom of Castile was one seven medieval kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula. The name “Catile” comes from the large number of castles that were built across the kingdom.
67 Sloth, for one : SIN (BARGES IN with “BARGE” OUT)
“Sloth”, meaning “indolence, sluggishness”, comes from the Middle English word “slowe”, which is also the root of our contemporary word “slow”. The animal, the sloth, is so named as it exhibits slow-moving behavior.
75 Classic candy company : NECCO
Necco Wafers were the best-known product line of the candy manufacturer called the New England Confectionery Company. The firm’s name was abbreviated to “NECCO”, an acronym that became synonymous with the wafers.
84 Swaths of land : TRACTS (SUBTRACTS with “SUB” OUT)
Our word “swath” comes from the German “Schwad” meaning “a row of cut grass”.
86 N.S.A.’s home : FT MEADE
Fort George G. Meade (often just “Fort Meade”) is a US Army post located near Odenton, Maryland. It is most famous these days as the location of the headquarters of the National Security Agency (NSA).
89 J. Cole’s “___ Knows” : SHE
“J. Cole” is the stage name of American rap artist Jermaine Cole. Cole was born in Germany, on the US Army base in Frankfurt.
92 One writing wrongs? : LIBELER
The word “libel” describes a published or written statement likely to harm a person’s reputation. It comes into English from the Latin “libellus”, the word for a small book. Back in the 1500s, libel was just a formal written statement, with the more damaging association arising in the 1600s. The related concept of slander is defamation in a transient form, such as speech, sign language or gestures.
93 Fifth note : SOL
The sol-fa syllables are: do, re, mi, fa, sol, la & ti.
100 Carriage, in Cambridge : PRAM
Another word used in Britain and Ireland that’s rarely used over here is “pram”, which in my day was the most common term for what is called a baby carriage in the US. “Pram” is short for “perambulator”.
103 Symbol of the National Audubon Society : EGRET
The National Audubon Society is an environmental organization that was formed in 1905. The society is named for John James Audubon, an ornithologist who compiled his famous book “Birds of America” between 1827 and 1838.
115 Elizabeth’s house : TUDOR
The Elizabethan era, the period associated with the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, is considered by many to be the golden age of English history. It was the age of William Shakespeare and the age of the English Renaissance. Elizabeth I was the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, and the last sovereign of the House of Tudor.
119 What Kwanzaa’s first principle, Umoja, means : UNITY
Kwanzaa is a celebration of African heritage that lasts from December 26 to January 1 annually. The holiday was introduced in 1966 as an alternative to the existing holidays at the end of the year. The name comes from the Swahili phrase “matunda ya kwanza”, meaning “first fruits of the harvest”. The seven days of Kwanzaa are dedicated to seven core principles known as “Nguzo Saba”.
- Umoja (Unity)
- Kujichagulia (Self-Determination)
- Ujima (Collective Work and Responsibility)
- Ujamaa (Cooperative Economics)
- Nia (Purpose)
- Kuumba (Creativity)
- Imani (Faith)
123 Where Molson Coors is TAP : NYSE
The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) can give some quite descriptive ticker symbols to companies, for example:
- Anheuser-Busch (BUD, for “Budweiser”)
- Molson Coors Brewing Company (TAP, as in “beer tap”)
- Steinway Musical Instruments (LVB, for “Ludwig van Beethoven”)
- Sotheby’s (BID, for the auction house)
126 Invite letters : RSVP
“RSVP” stands for “répondez s’il vous plaît”, which is French for “answer, please”.
Down
2 One raising Cain : EVE
According to the Bible, Adam and Eve had several children, although only the first three are mentioned by name: Cain, Abel and Seth.
6 Element #26 : IRON
The Latin word for “iron” is “ferrum”, which gives us “Fe” as the metal’s chemical symbol.
8 Cain raised him : ENOCH
According to the Bible’s Book of Genesis, Enoch was the son of Cain, and therefore the grandson of Adam and Eve. According to some religious traditions, Enoch’s mother was Awan, who was also Enoch’s aunt (Cain’s sister).
11 Protagonist of the Zelda games : LINK
“The Legend of Zelda” is a whole series of video games. First released in 1986, I hear that it is very successful …
15 First name in daredevilry : EVEL
Daredevil Evel Knievel contracted hepatitis C from the many blood transfusions that he needed after injuries incurred during stunts. He had to have a liver transplant as a result, but his health declined after that. Knievel eventually passed away in 2007.
20 Pachyderm of kid-lit : BABAR
“Babar the Elephant” originated in France, a creation of Jean de Brunhoff in 1931. The first book was “Histoire de Babar”, a book so successful it was translated into English two years later for publication in Britain and the US. Jean de Brunhoff wrote six more Babar stories before he died in 1937, and then his son Laurent continued his father’s work.
A pachyderm is a large mammal noted for having very thick skin and hooves, or nails resembling hooves. In terms of taxonomy, animals such as elephants, rhinoceroses and hippopotamuses used to be classified in the order Pachydermata (from the Greek for “thick” and “skin”). That order is now obsolete, as it has been shown that the aforementioned “pachyderms” do not in fact share a common ancestor. Despite the reclassification, “pachyderm” persists in common, non-scientific usage.
22 “The Joy Luck Club” author : AMY TAN
Amy Tan lives not too far from here, in Sausalito just north of San Francisco. Tan is an American writer of Chinese descent whose most successful work is “The Joy Luck Club”. “The Joy Luck Club” was made into a movie produced by Oliver Stone in 1993. The novel and movie tell of four Chinese-American immigrant families in San Francisco who start the Joy Luck Club, a group playing Mahjong for money and eating delicious food.
29 “Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water ‘fore I Diiie” poet : ANGELOU
Maya Angelou was an African-American author and poet. Angelou recited her poem “On the Pulse of Morning” at the inauguration of President Clinton in 1983. Here are some words of wisdom from the great lady:
I work very hard, and I play very hard. I’m grateful for life. And I live it – I believe life loves the liver of it. I live it.
31 Individual speech patterns : IDIOLECTS
An individual’s speech pattern is referred to as his or her “idiolect”. The idiolect comprises the vocabulary, grammar and pronunciation used by a person.
45 Some classic PCs : IBMS
Tech giant IBM was founded as the Tabulating Machine Company in 1896. The company changed its name to the Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation (CTR) in 1911 and was listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1916. The name “International Business Machines” (IBM) was given first to the company’s Canadian subsidiary, and then to its South American subsidiary. In 1924, it was decided to adopt the International Business Machines name for the whole company. Good choice …
51 N.B.A. coach Steve : KERR
Steve Kerr is a retired NBA basketball player who moved into team management. Kerr was born in Beirut, Lebanon, the son of an American academic who specialized in Middle East studies. Kerr’s father was assassinated by militant nationalists in Beirut when Steve was 19 years old.
59 Fireworks ingredient : NITER
The chemical name for saltpeter (also “saltpetre, niter, nitre”) is potassium nitrate. The exact origin of the name “saltpeter” isn’t clear, but it may have come from the Latin “sal petrae” meaning “stone salt”. The main use for potassium nitrate is as a fertilizer, a source of potassium and nitrogen. As it is a powerful oxidizing agent, it is also used in amateur rocket propellants. Anyone who has ignited one of those “engines” would have noticed the lilac-colored flame, indicating the presence of potassium.
63 Monopoly holding : DEED
In the game of Monopoly there are 28 title deeds:
- 22 streets
- 4 railroads
- 2 utilities
65 “Peter Pan” pooch : NANA
In J.M. Barrie’s play and novel about Peter Pan, Peter takes Wendy Darling and her two brothers (John and Michael) on adventures on the island of Neverland. Back in the real world, the Darling children are taken care of by a nanny, a Newfoundland dog called Nana. It is Nana who takes Peter Pan’s shadow away from him as he tries to escape from the Darling house one night.
81 Four Corners tribe : UTES
The Four Corners region of the US surrounds the meeting point of the four states of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. It is the only point in the US that is shared by four states.
85 PowerPoint starting point : TEMPLATE
Given that PowerPoint is a Microsoft product, it is perhaps a bit of a paradox that the original application that was to become PowerPoint was designed for the Macintosh computer. This first release was called “Presenter”. The company that designed Presenter was purchased by Microsoft in 1987.
87 “Ad majorem ___ gloriam” (Jesuit motto) : DEI
Saint Ignatius of Loyola (also known as Inigo Lopez de Loyola) was a Spanish knight from a noble family in the Basque region of Spain. He left behind his easy life to become a hermit and a priest, and eventually founded the Society of Jesus (The Jesuit order of the Roman Catholic church).
88 Chemistry Nobelist Rutherford : ERNEST
By some definitions, New Zealand-born physicist and chemist Ernest Rutherford was the first person to “split the atom”. Rutherford bombarded nitrogen with alpha particles and thereby forced neutrons out of the nucleus of the nitrogen atom. The first intentional nuclear “fission” came decades later in the 1930s, with experiments in which larger nuclei were split into smaller nuclei.
96 Battle of Britain grp. : RAF
The Royal Air Force (RAF) is the oldest independent air force in the world (i.e. the first air force to become independent of army or navy forces). The RAF was formed during WWI on 1 April 1918, a composite of two earlier forces, the Royal Flying Corps (part of the Army) and the Royal Naval Air Service. The RAF’s “finest hour” was the Battle of Britain, when the vastly outnumbered British fighters fought off the might of the Luftwaffe causing Hitler to delay his plan to cross the English Channel. This outcome prompted Winston Churchill to utter the memorable words
Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.
97 Powell of the Federal Reserve : JEROME
Jerome “Jay” Powell was appointed chairman of the Federal Reserve by President Donald Trump in 2018. Powell had been appointed in 2012 to the Board of the Federal Reserve by President Barack Obama.
102 Wirelessly driven toy, for short : RC CAR
Radio-controlled (RC)
104 Eva of “Green Acres” : GABOR
Eva Gabor was the youngest of the Gabor sisters, all three of whom were celebrated Hollywood actresses and socialites (her siblings were Zsa-Zsa and Magda). One of Eva’s claims to fame is the unwitting promotion of the game called “Twister”, the sales of which were languishing in 1966. In an appearance on “The Tonight Show” she got on all fours and played the game with Johnny Carson. Sales took off immediately, and Twister became a huge hit.
The popular sitcom “Green Acres” originally aired from 1965 to 1971. The magnificent stars of the show were Eddie Albert and Eva Gabor, playing a couple who moved from New York City to a farm in the country. “Green Acres” was canceled as part of CBS’s so-called “rural purge”. In a move to attract younger audiences, shows were added to the schedule with more urban and contemporary themes. Classics like “The Beverly Hillbillies”, “Hee Haw” and “Mayberry R.F.D.” were dropped at the same time as “Green Acres”.
108 Patagonia prowler : PUMA
The mountain lion is found in much of the Americas from the Yukon in Canada right down to the southern Andes in South America. Because the mountain lion is found over such a vast area, it has many different names applied by local peoples, such as “cougar” and “puma”. In fact, the mountain lion holds the Guinness record for the animal with the most number of different names, with over 40 in English alone.
Patagonia is a very sparsely populated region at the very southern tip of South America that is divided administratively between Chile and Argentina. The area is named for the Patagons, a race of giant humans that were rumored to live there.
109 Smartphone predecessors, for short : PDAS
Personal digital assistant (PDA)
117 “Jersey Shore” airer : MTV
“Jersey Shore” is yet another reality TV series, one that ran on MTV from 2009 until 2012. The first season featured a group of eight friends sharing a house on the Jersey shore, and the second season had the same cadre warming themselves in a house down in Miami.
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1 Penalty assessors : REFS
5 “Be that way!” : FINE!
9 Black Friday destination : MALL
13 Touch-tone phone abbr. : OPER
17 Anatomical part from the Latin for “grape” : UVEA
18 Mashhad’s country : IRAN
19 Portrayer of Mrs. Smith in 2005’s “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” : JOLIE
20 Cheer for a diva : BRAVA!
21 Filipino meat dish : BEEF ADOBO
23 Sumatran swinger : ORANG
24 Shoelace protector : AGLET
25 Citrusy breakfast treat : LEMON SCONE (ending with “CONE” UP)
26 Sue Bird or Larry Bird : BASKETBALL STAR (ending with “STAR” UP)
28 Part of a certain chain : DAISY
30 Sound from a cappuccino maker : HISS
32 Tikka masala go-with : NAAN
33 The Tabard, in “The Canterbury Tales” : INN
34 Echelon : TIER
38 Former roles for Kamala Harris and Arlen Specter, for short : DAS
39 Component of an old PC tower : CD DRIVE
42 Avocado toast topper, perhaps : EGG
43 Like the main character in “Memento” : AMNESIC
45 Pension alternative, in brief : IRA
46 ___ Dingbats (icon-filled font) : ZAPF
48 Layer of a 42-Across : HEN
49 Hardly any : NOT A LOT
50 Paging device : BEEPER (BARKEEPER with “ARK” OUT)
53 One may be called on to give, informally : ALUM
55 Queequeg’s figurine in “Moby-Dick,” e.g. : IDOL
56 Texter’s vociferous agreement : OMG, YES!
57 Fair-hiring inits. : EEO
58 Like Hadrian’s Wall in northern England : ROMAN
60 Creates a new account? : RETELLS
62 Divest : RID
64 Nickname : DUB (DUBLINER with “LINER” OUT)
66 El ___ (Castilian hero) : CID
67 Sloth, for one : SIN (BARGES IN with “BARGE” OUT)
72 Greek H : ETA
73 Was of service to : STEADED
75 Classic candy company : NECCO
76 Like : A LA
79 Follows : ENSUES
82 Figure (out) : SUSS
83 Japan’s legislature : DIET
84 Swaths of land : TRACTS (SUBTRACTS with “SUB” OUT)
86 N.S.A.’s home : FT MEADE
89 J. Cole’s “___ Knows” : SHE
90 Guitar’s resting place, often : KNEE
91 Snickering sound : HEH
92 One writing wrongs? : LIBELER
93 Fifth note : SOL
94 Thinks highly of : ADMIRES
97 Get stuck : JAM
98 Ja’s opposite : NEIN
99 Estadio Azteca cheer : OLE!
100 Carriage, in Cambridge : PRAM
101 Of all time : EVER
103 Symbol of the National Audubon Society : EGRET
105 Imprimatur : SEAL OF APPROVAL (ending with “OVAL” UP)
110 Finds : COMES ACROSS (ending with “CROSS” UP)
114 One of 30+ million Americans : TEXAN
115 Elizabeth’s house : TUDOR
116 Midair collision of sorts : CHEST BUMP
119 What Kwanzaa’s first principle, Umoja, means : UNITY
120 Mosque officials : IMAMS
121 Clicking sounds? : AHAS
122 Mathematician/historian Neugebauer : OTTO
123 Where Molson Coors is TAP : NYSE
124 Beer buy : CASE
125 Epithet for a G.O.P. moderate, maybe : RINO
126 Invite letters : RSVP
Down
1 Spice blend : RUB
2 One raising Cain : EVE
3 In a state of shock, say : FEELING NUMB
4 Containers that can be cracked : SAFES
5 Pet name derived from the Latin for “faithful” : FIDO
6 Element #26 : IRON
7 Scores unexpectedly, as tickets : NABS
8 Cain raised him : ENOCH
9 Messy situation : MORASS
10 “Woe is me!” : ALAS!
11 Protagonist of the Zelda games : LINK
12 Absolutely epic : LEGENDARY
13 Put together : ORGANIZE
14 Gloomy mood : PALL
15 First name in daredevilry : EVEL
16 “Phooey!” : RATS!
19 Bipartisan 2012 stimulus bill : JOBS ACT
20 Pachyderm of kid-lit : BABAR
22 “The Joy Luck Club” author : AMY TAN
27 Tiny bit : TAD
28 Never-give-up sort : DIEHARD
29 “Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water ‘fore I Diiie” poet : ANGELOU
31 Individual speech patterns : IDIOLECTS
35 Online commenter’s qualification : IMO
36 Unabridged : ENTIRE
37 Newspaper subscriber : READER
39 Mountain goat’s perch : CRAG
40 Use an e-cig : VAPE
41 Fencing option : EPEE
44 Book return spot : SLOT
45 Some classic PCs : IBMS
47 To’s counterpart : FRO
51 N.B.A. coach Steve : KERR
52 Digitally endorse : E-SIGN
54 Bull or buck : MALE
56 Ancient : OLD AS TIME
59 Fireworks ingredient : NITER
61 What crossed fingers behind one’s back might indicate : LIE
63 Monopoly holding : DEED
65 “Peter Pan” pooch : NANA
67 Make an appearance : BE SEEN
68 Win for a marketing team : AD SALE
69 Barbershop offerings : SCISSOR CUTS
70 Winter fishing spot : ICE HOLE
71 Small card for a short message : NOTELET
73 Meeting, informally : SESH
74 Boneheaded : DUMB
76 Try to find out : ASK
77 Moon over Miami, to many a Miamian : LUNA
78 Undercover? : ABED
80 Circuit diagram : SCHEMATIC
81 Four Corners tribe : UTES
85 PowerPoint starting point : TEMPLATE
86 Listing at an ice cream shop : FLAVORS
87 “Ad majorem ___ gloriam” (Jesuit motto) : DEI
88 Chemistry Nobelist Rutherford : ERNEST
95 Twisted humor? : IRONY
96 Battle of Britain grp. : RAF
97 Powell of the Federal Reserve : JEROME
102 Wirelessly driven toy, for short : RC CAR
104 Eva of “Green Acres” : GABOR
105 Floor : STUN
106 Itsy : EENY
107 Alliance of powers : AXIS
108 Patagonia prowler : PUMA
109 Smartphone predecessors, for short : PDAS
111 “Didn’t see ya there!” : OH, HI!
112 Uncharitable : MEAN
113 Fuel brand with a blue oval in its logo : ESSO
117 “Jersey Shore” airer : MTV
118 Corny sound effect? : POP!
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