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Horizontal
1. US State
2. Boston Logan International Airport Code
3. Greek Vowel
4. Island that is a self-governing state in free association with New Zealand
5. The short, fine, soft hair of certain animals
6. Country
7. Country
8. Personal pronoun
9. A soft flatbread rolled around a filling
10. Slang for 'You'
11. Capital of British Virgin Islands: .... Town
12. a system of institutionalised racial segregation that existed in South Africa
14. Greek letter
15. Airport area code for Reykjavik
16. Plural of a small oval fruit with a hard stone and bitter flesh, green when unripe and bluish black when ripe, used as food and as a source of oil.
17. Visible body part of the mouth
Vertical
1. Country in the Benelux
2. Slang for policeman
3. Suppose to be the case, without proof
4. The plants of a particular region
5. Abbreviation for an African Country
6. Capital of India
7. New Fund Offered
8. Opposite of 'Yes'
9. Augmented Reality
10. Human energy field
11. Body of Zulu warriors
13. Dutch Football Club and Greek Hero
14. World Capital
15. Abbreviation of Professional
17. Slang for Talk Later
18. A baked dish of fruit, or meat and vegetables, typically with a top and base of pastry.
The way this puzzle is arranged, it's impossible to complete without knowing straight up that a body of Zulu warriors is an "impi", since even completing the rest of the puzzle leaves only i_p_.. not really common knowledge, nor something one could figure out from the partially completed word
Agreed. Thats my only complaint about this quiz. If we are trying to come up with rather obscure answers having more than two letters would be helpful.
What provides the random “J” between “we” and “epsilon”? That’s the only bit I couldn’t get (apparently it has a 41% success rate, which I can only assume was people randomly typing the alphabet?)
usually in crosswords, you don't have a separate down and across clue for the same number unless they are starting in the same square. look into how most crosswords do their numbering and you'll see what i mean. it's hard for me to explain.