mirror.co.uk SATURDAY 17.08.2019 DAILY MIRROR^37
DM1ST
Hide’n’seek wordsearch
Make the most of what the season has to offer with these
fruit-picking terms. Three kinds of fruit dessert are spelt out in the
leftover letters. Solutions in Monday’s Daily Mirror
AGRICULTURE
APPLE
AUTUMN
BACKACHE
BASKET
BERRY
CASH IN HAND
CASUAL
DAMAGE
ELEMENTS
EMPLOYMENT
EXERCISE
FARM SHOP
FIELD
FRESH
GRAPE
HARVEST
HOLIDAY
HOPPER
KILOGRAMS
KNIFE
LABELLING
PACKED
LUNCH
SEASONAL
SPEED
STINT
SUMMER
SUNSCREEN
THINNING
THORNS
TRAY
VARIETY
WEIGH-IN
YIELD
CODEBREAKER EASY SU-DOKU
KILLER SU-DOKU
SU-DOKU TOUGHIE
HITOSHII
NAME GAME
PARENTHOOD
1A, 2N, 3O, 4T, 5H, 6E, 7R, 8P, 9O, 10D.
PICTURE POINTER
MIRRORGRAM
CONFRONTED
JUST A
BIT OF FUN
2 Plasterer
BRICKWORK
1 Shrivel, 2 Relish,
3 Shire, 4 Rise, 5 Sir,
6 Risk, 7 Skirt,
8 Strike, 9 Brisket.
COUPLETS
Arrive, Jurist, Marina,
Period, Serial, Tariff
Central letters RI
30-SEC BRAIN TEASER
Beginner 15, Intermediate 273,
Genius 43.
HIDE’N’SEEK
WORDSEARCH
Refracting, reflecting,
catadioptric
ACROSS: Extra, Pulps, Spume,
Bales, Aisle, Attic, Windy,
Harem, Ode, Amour, Video,
Bee, Metes, Gofer, Trill, Junta,
Agape, Blitz, Reeks, Elegy.
DOWN: Elbow, Major, Image,
Talon, Tonne, Drone, Assay,
Stabs, Orb, Quoted, Elixir, Eve,
Peach, Glaze, Audio, Laser,
Frame, Evoke, Steam, Reedy.
SPEEDBREAKER
SOLUTION
WEDNESDAY 14 AUG
TWO-SPEED COFFEEBREAK
ACROSS: 3. Earldom, 7. Tarmac,
- Theorem, 9. Tree, 11. Then, 12. Heron,
- Duel, 16. Newt, 17. Agree, 18. Peal,
- Lads, 21. Treason, 22. Rennet,
- Deities.
DOWN: 1. Utah, 2. Brother, 3. Eaten, - Ache, 5. Loosened, 6. Moment,
- Relevant, 11. Tug, 13. Reasons, 14. Owl,
- Darted, 18. Panes, 19. Lore, 20. Bath.
QUIZWORD
ACROSS
- La Rochelle
- Hoboken
- Osier
- Sumo
- Form
- Gun
- Orache
- Island
- Top
- Naas
- Haas
- North
- Darling
- Mysterious
DOWN - La Bamba
- Raki
- Cantor
- Elon Musk
- Laing
- The Shooting
- Grand Design
- Whinchat
- Ananias
- Calder
- Party
- Argo
CROSSWORD
ACROSS
- Charleston
- Unicorn
- Nitre
- Knit
- Sigh
- Tor
- Rueful
- Snatch
- Urn
- Leak
- Rota
- Cadge
- Burn out
- Celebrated
DOWN - Cuisine
- Anon
- Lentil
- Sunshine
- Octet
- Sucker punch
- Search party
- Bull’s-eye
- Twofold
- Barber
- Nudge
- Brat
PUZZLE
MAGAZINES
BROUGHT
TO YOU BY
YESTERDAY’S
SOLUTIONS
30-sec brain teaser
Boost your brain power with our 30-second test. Start with the number on the left and follow the
instructions. Beginners should aim to complete the puzzle in 30 seconds. Intermediates should
finish their own puzzle and the Beginner’s Challenge. Genius players have 30 seconds to complete
their own plus the Intermediate. Good luck! Solutions in Monday’s Daily Mirror
The name game
Hidden in the grid is
the name of a film.
Answer the questions,
then rearrange the
letters corresponding
to your answers to fill
in the name.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
BOX1: What is
England’s largest
landlocked county?
Derbyshire (A)
Staffordshire (D)
Shropshire (U)
BOX2: What is the
relationship between
Viola and Sebastian
in Shakespeare’s
Twelfth Night?
Siblings (N)
Mother and son (L)
Husband and wife (E)
BOX3: What was
Mickey Mouse’s
original name?
Mortimer (C)
Mister (S)
Marshall (I)
BOX4: Which actress
played Serena van der
Woodsen on the TV
series Gossip Girl?
Leighton Meester (T)
Blake Lively (O)
Jessica Alba (W)
BOX5: What note does
an orchestra tune to?
A (R)
C (P)
E (C)
BOX6: Which Oasis
song begins with the
lyrics ‘Slip inside the
eye of your mind’?
Wonderwall (T)
Don’t Look
Back in Anger (K)
Some Might Say (U)
BOX7: What is
Paul McCartney’s
full name?
Paul John McCartney (C)
Paul James
McCartney (R)
James Paul
McCartney (M)
BOX8: The Amhara
region is in which
African country?
Uganda (E)
Ethiopia (O)
Kenya (X)
BOX9: How
many legs does
a mosquito have?
6 (S)
9 (B)
12 (Y)
BOX10: For what did
Orson Welles (pictured)
win an Oscar in 1942?
Acting (E)
Writing (T)
Directing (F)
Double trouble
Each clue leads to
two answers which
differ from each
other by one letter.
You must decide
which is the
correct one.
For example,
the two possible
answers to 1A
are TOUCH and
TOUGH — the
answer to 3D
will reveal which
one is correct.
Solutions in
Monday’s Daily
Mirror
ACROSS
1 Tactile sense Ł Durable, hardy (5)
4 Striped domestic cat Ł Plump (5)
10 Australian former tennis player Ł
Settle with notes and coins (3, 4)
11 Tired-looking, haggard Ł Texan accent? (5)
12 Snip, trim Ł Applaud (4)
13 Thrashings Ł Orientation (8)
15 Competence, profiency Ł
Motionless (5)
16 William —, founder of the Salvation Army Ł
Scotch —, hearty soup (5)
21 Spherical discharge of lightning Ł
Computer protection system (8)
23 Rubbish tip Ł Moist (4)
25 Wireless Ł
Lines from the centre of a circle (5)
26 Percy Bysshe —, British romantic poet Ł
Bombarded with mortar bombs (7)
27 — Hill, saucy comedian Ł Rabbit (5)
28 Cheerful, jolly Ł Clemency (5)
DOWN
2 Remote bush country Ł
Decrease, reduction (7)
3 Virtuous Ł Spur, incite (4)
5 Clive —, TV presenter Ł
Hans Christian —, Danish fairy tale author (8)
6 Interweave strands of hair Ł
Grey matter (5)
7 Small mark or spot Ł Utter words (5)
8 Crawl, inch Ł Tweet (5)
9 Nearby Ł Piece of garlic (5)
14 Decelerate (4, 4) Ł
Final confrontation to settle a dispute (8)
17 Sports shoe Ł
Short preview for a film (7)
18 Previously Ł Love very much (5)
19 Broom Ł Redden with embarrassment (5)
20 Tool for digging Ł Shelter from sunlight (5)
22 Mosquito-like insect Ł
Elongated area of high pressure (5)
24 Group of cattle Ł In this place (4)
Orson Welles
picture
Puzzles for
17 August