Wok! She twist has so dew any fan! I mad to go over it ail again at tie and just to sew what I hid wrong. Tea but of men!!!
Charles Montpetit 1:06:09 · 2022-10-16T03:23:47.182Z
Having every three-letter entry in the grid feature two "true" letters and a "lying" one is a brilliant concept. But since 1a is FOE and 1d is YES, I’d have thought that the rebus FY belonged at the crossing, Y being the lying letter in 1a and F, the one in 1d. Instead, it seems that the solution is H because it’s lying both ways (while producing HOE in 1a and HES in 1d). Okay, but why can’t it be R (ROE/RES) or W (WOE/WES)? For that matter, why is there an E at the crossing of 9a's BET and 11d's DON (forming BEE and EON) and not an N (BEN/NON), an S (BES/SON) or a Y (BEY/YON)?
I guess that's true; I could've foolproofed it a little more. I was operating under the assumption that only the most common of words would be considered valid corrections (as opposed to WES, a nickname, and BEY, a foreign historical title).