I solved my first Wednesday today! Couldn’t have done it without watching Chris these past couple of weeks. Witnessing his thought process has helped me grow so much as a budding NYT Crossword enthusiast
I think "open" is just meant to be read as a noun, as in "an opening for conducting business". "Fit" is short for outfit, a contraction that I believe has become popular in the last ten years or so thanks to people posting their clothes on social media.
I solved my first Wednesday today! Couldn’t have done it without watching Chris these past couple of weeks. Witnessing his thought process has helped me grow so much as a budding NYT Crossword enthusiast
Congratulations! I remember the feeling well 😊
For daylight savings time, you "spring forward" and "*fall* back" - the mnemonic is a pun on the two seasons.
I think "open" is just meant to be read as a noun, as in "an opening for conducting business". "Fit" is short for outfit, a contraction that I believe has become popular in the last ten years or so thanks to people posting their clothes on social media.
"Open" as a noun, yes. Some TV shows (often sitcoms) start with a "cold open", a short scene which appears before the introductory credits.
Thank you. I didn't think of that.
A pleasure to watch & learn from.
Cheers 🇬🇧🇺🇸.
Not heard hays used that way. In Scotland we said we were " at the hay ".
Nor I (heard the noun verbed like that).[edited to correct autocorrections]