This past weekend, Max, Nora, and I played a word chain puzzle around animals. We tried to list as many animals as we could, with one condition: the first letter of the next animal had to be the last letter of the previous.
One fun example was:
zebra aardvark kangaroo otter rabbit tortoise eagle |
As we all know an animal or two for each letter, the game moves quickly; we later put additional constraints around repeating letters, so that tortoise > eagle > egret would not be allowed, as the starting letter “e” was repeated.
This week’s GeekDad Puzzle of the week is to find a specific word chain. I will try to make it straightforward, by giving the number of steps, the first and last words, and even provide clues for each word.
The twist? Instead of matching just the first and last letter of each word, each step progresses only by matching the first and last four letters of each word.
Here is a short example, moving from “abdicate” to “kingless” in four easy steps:
abdicate
kingless |
The second word starts with “cate,” and the second to last word (before kingless) ends with “king.” Easy, right?
The solution path is abdicate > caterwauling > linguistic > sticking > kingless.
Note that so as to avoid any letters have to perform “double duty,” each word in the list will have at least 8 letters.
For your chance at this week’s fabulous prize from ThinkGeek, try and solve the word chain below moving to each clue-indicated word being sure to match the first and last four letters at each step, moving from “alchemist” to “material” in just fourteen easy steps:
alchemist
material |
As always, please send your responses to GeekDad Central. All correct, or at least reasonably well-reasoned responses will be entered into a random drawing for this week’s fabulous prize: a $50 Gift Certificate from the fine folks at ThinkGeek.
Good luck, and happy puzzling!