How Should I Annotate A Suspicious Crossword Clue For Later Review?

2026-02-01 04:56:05 277
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4 Answers

Penelope
Penelope
2026-02-04 17:02:22
Here's the system I use when a crossword clue smells fishy — it's pragmatic and a little nerdy, but it keeps my frustration low and my curiosity high.

First, I mark the grid discreetly: a small dot in the corner of the square or a tiny asterisk next to the clue number in my printout. Next, I create a short note entry (either in a pocket notebook or in a note app) with the puzzle identifier, the clue text verbatim, the number/position (e.g., 17A), the letters I currently have (AL), and a one-line reason why it feels off — e.g., 'weird abbrev', 'likely theme entry', 'obscure name', or 'possible typo'. I also jot down any alternate answers that briefly cross my mind and a confidence score like 2/10.

Later-review is simple: I sort notes by confidence and by category ('lookup', 'theme-check', 'cross-reference'). For digital notes I add tags and a link/photo of the grid. If I'm working on paper, I staple a photo or scan to the note. When I actually review, I consult quick sources — dictionaries, a crossword database, or a history site — and I record the final resolution: confirmed, plausible, or unresolved. This little ritual keeps me from losing time on a puzzle while giving me a clear trail to investigate later. Feels tidy and lets me enjoy solving without getting stuck.
Ulysses
Ulysses
2026-02-05 01:12:14
I scribble shorthand and let the clues breathe until I can come back with fresh eyes. My compact method: write the clue number, copy the clue exactly, then list the letters I have with blanks (for example 23D: 'Old coin?' — O I N). After that I add one or two reason tags like 'pun', 'abbrev', or 'probable misprint'.

If I'm on a phone I title the note with the puzzle name and date so I can find it later, and I color-code urgent looks in red. On paper I use a little star and a sticky note. When I revisit, I open a couple of fast references — a crossword clue database, a slang dictionary, or an encyclopedia — and I check whether the suspected trick is theme-related. I try not to stew: flag, move on, fix later. It keeps the fun alive and my solving pace steady.
Felix
Felix
2026-02-05 21:29:10
My approach is a bit methodical — I treat a suspicious clue the way I would annotate a library book for later research. First step: preserve context. I copy the full clue and its exact enumeration into a digital notebook entry and include the surrounding across/down entries so I can see crossing letters later. Then I capture my initial hypotheses in bullet form: possible meanings, probable abbreviations, geographic or era-specific references, and whether the clue reads like a theme device.

Next I prioritize. Anything that blocks multiple crossings gets top priority; obscure proper names and archaic words come after. For each flagged item I add quick lookup sources—'Merriam-Webster', 'Wiktionary', a crossword database, or a historical index—and estimate how long it'll take to resolve (under 5 minutes, deep-dive, or consult specialist forum). I also add a short note if the clue seems to rely on a prior puzzle or a cultural reference so I can check that context. When I finally return to the entry, I update the note with what I found and why the clue behaved the way it did. It feels satisfying to transform that little mystery into a neat resolution and a learning moment.
Spencer
Spencer
2026-02-05 22:52:21
I like quick, visual flags: a circled clue number, a sticky tab on the page, and a one-line mental map. My shorthand is simple — Cl# / clue phrase / pattern / reason — for example, '14A / “River film” / I L M / pun? obscure river name.' If I'm solving on a tablet I take a screenshot and either annotate it with a pen tool or drop it into a 'To Check' album.

When I come back I first test obvious alternates against crossing letters, then search a couple of fast sites for proper names or slang. I also sometimes leave a tiny memo on the puzzle, like 'verify with crosses' or 'look up artist name' so I remember why it was odd. This keeps the solving flow Unbroken and turns mystery clues into mini research wins — kind of addictive, honestly.
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