Getting Naticked
A long time ago, I was solving this puzzle and got stuck at an unguessable (to me) crossing: N. C. WYETH crossing
NATICK
at the “N” — I knewWYETH
but forgot his initials, andNATICK
… is a suburb of Boston that I had no hope of knowing. It was clued as someplace the Boston Marathon runs through (???). Anyway,NATICK
— the more obscure name in that crossing — became shorthand for an unguessable cross, esp. where the cross involves two proper nouns, neither of which is exceedingly well known.NATICK
took hold as crossword slang, and the term can now be both noun (“I had aNATICK
in the SW corner…”) or verb (“I gotNATICKED
by 50A / 34D!”)
Here’s the Urban Dictionary entry. Learned that that “crosswordese” is a thing. Been doing the NYT Crosswords fairly regularly over the past few years and that page has a lot of useful, vowel-y ‘bridge’ words and phrases (e.g. AGRA
, ESAU
, ISAO
, OMOO
, DEUSIRAE
.)