Or maybe Bagshot Row (BAG+SHOT+ROW)
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Quote:
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And this?
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BRANDY HALL: Sing a song of Tolkien: strong’s the spirit here!
CRICKHOLLOW: Pain in neck and empty? Nomenclature is queer. BYWATER: By this may you live, since it’s not by bread alone – OATBARTON: And here’s a place where (fancifully) hob-nobs could be grown. ???T???: Here’s the way that you must serve a tennis ball, HOBBITON: Here dwelt one whose stories, (many thought), were tall. THISTLEBROOK: Here have fun and paddle, but do not prick your toes - GREAT SMIALS: And here big grins abound, they say, and none are lachrymose! A modest verse in rhyming couplets, to be sung to the tune of 'Sing a Song of Sixpence.' THEME: SHIRE LOCATIONS |
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No. |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6sSwBnGHmQM |
Waymeet?
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Aha! WAYMEET - I dimly recall tennis coaches hopelessly encouraging me to "meet" the ball (to no avail)
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Not Waymeet.
Didn't mean to mislead you. It isn't a *proper* tennis term I'm looking for. |
There isn't any place which contains 'way' remaining, though......
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Not 'way,' no. But there are ways of indicating a way. ;)
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OK, here's a real stretch: WINDWHISTLE? That's at least the sound of it....
Unless you're trying to make the ball a FAR THING |
No.
The phrase could also apply to a cricket, rounders/baseball, snooker, billiards or pool ball. |
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Signs? |
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Also a squash or golf ball? |
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It's a kind of element that we use all the time on this thread. |
'FOR'? As in, 'for him', 'for her' etc.
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Or maybe 'returning' or something similar?
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Hint please?
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Okay, all I got is LONGBOTTOM
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If you ask the way, you ask the ...
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Direction?
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East Road?
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Try an abbreviation for a direction.
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Dwaling????????? When you "wale" on something you hit it hard, so D + WALING, I guess
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D isn't a direction!
Look at a map of the Shire. You can find one online. |
Okay, compass says 'M' 'N', 'T' and 'P', but I don't see how that helps......
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M T P?
Never heard of those as compass points. |
Oh. I see. Cheeky......
Final answer: Whitwell (W+HIT+WELL) |
Yes!!!!!!!!!!
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Quote:
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BRANDY HALL: Sing a song of Tolkien: strong’s the spirit here!
CRICKHOLLOW: Pain in neck and empty? Nomenclature is queer. BYWATER: By this may you live, since it’s not by bread alone – OATBARTON: And here’s a place where (fancifully) hob-nobs could be grown. WHITWELL: Here’s the way that you must serve a tennis ball, HOBBITON: Here dwelt one whose stories, (many thought), were tall. THISTLEBROOK: Here have fun and paddle, but do not prick your toes - GREAT SMIALS: And here big grins abound, they say, and none are lachrymose! A modest verse in rhyming couplets, to be sung to the tune of 'Sing a Song of Sixpence.' THEME: SHIRE LOCATIONS William, the floor is yours. |
All right, I have a few things to do so it will be a bit before I get the next one up
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Okay, ladies and gentlemen, let's go!
1. Arab handmaid ate Jewish pastry- the upset produced a fiend 2. Get out? Nein! He's backwards! 3. Remember England; he was in there. 4. Bluetooth gets garbled after tea, so you'll have to unscramble him 5. He's like, "Crazy beach, crazy!" 6. Glam rocker without even thinking- he was the first and might be the last 7. Key crew! Activity will reveal him 8. He's a dunce on one side |
3. Beren
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5. Sounds like Fingolfin or Finarfin, by the word pattern. Can't reason which though.
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2. Tuor?
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6. Maglor (GLAM+RO)
5. Maedhros (MAD+SHORE) |
8. Feanor (OAF)
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