Word puzzle fun

:smack: :smack: :smack: :smack: :smack: :smack: :smack:

dorm
dice
wane
price
such
crane

Shucks, I didn’t even need the hints.

Thanks for elevating the level of discourse, capn! :dubious:

My last post was an ill fated attempt at humor and undeniably not appropriate. My sincerest apologies.

Not a prob, capn – those who are still playing can take it as a hint. “Hmm, capn’s list caused twicks to raise an eyebrow…”

Thanks for a handsome apology.

so…

dane
lane
shane
wore

would work?

Yup.

Okay boys and girls, maybe you can help with the following. I was straightening up last night and found the following list on a slip of paper:

PLAID
RAKED [the “R” overwriting something else, and the “K” overwriting a “C”, then the whole thing scribbed out; BAK (presumably on my way to BAKED, but this was also scribbed out; SLAKED changed to STAKED, which was thus the final version of the entry for that line.
WINES

Note: For the tinfoil hat crowd – this is clearly in my own handwriting, er, block printing, and it’s on a pad I use for shopping lists and the like.

Okay, obviously (well, it’s obvious to me), I was working on a list of some sort of “Words that [something or other]” It also seems obvious to me that I was having a hard time coming up with additional examples – three words ain’t much of a list. The question is, of course – WTF was the premise I was playing with?

Let me say a couple of things about how my mind works – I’ll put them in a spoiler box so if anyone’s still playing with the challenge above they won’t get any additonal hints:

[spoiler]My tendency is to play with letter substitutions more than letter rearrangements. I am not a natural anagrammer. (Some people – like Merl Reagle, a name some puzzle aficianados might know – do it as naturlly as breathing. Not me.) For me, an early childhood memory is of spending all kinds of time trying to come up with combinations of letters that would be words if you fill-in-the-vowel with all five vowels, like MASS-MESS-MISS-MOSS-MUSS and PAT-PET-PIT-POT-PUT. I’ve got a long list (somewhere) of words that are still words if you drop the initial “S”: supper, switch, swallow, skill,… It goes on for two columns on a legal sheet. Some of this is stuff I end up being able to use at work – most of it is just for my own amusement.

Anyway, the point is that that kind of letter-substitution thing is typical of about 90% of the wordplay stuff that I do in my head. It almost always involves self-contained words, not “take a letter from this word and put it in that word.” [/spoiler]

So – any ideas where I might have been going with this? I’ll warn you now, I do not know the answer to this, but y’all seem like the right crew to help me with it.

Heh. You’re not going to believe it, but I looked at the list one more time, and the answer jumped out at me. I’ll leave it as a challenge, but I do know the answer now and can provide hints if necessary.

Damn my brain works in some weird freakin’ ways.

are you just giving us

PLAID
RAKED
WINES

or is RAKED not in there? Or what?

Oh . . .

PLAID
STAKED
WINES

sorry.

Was thinking about it as I drove to work. If I allowed proper nouns,

CATHER
CATHY

would both work – but I don’t allow proper nouns, so that’s no good.

I have work to do, and three people stacked up seeking my guidance, so I’ll be back later. Have fun… :smiley:

Okay, here’s a few more:

both
brat
chi
dune
edit
fare
fore
pith
pooh
spied

Hmmmm… hope I didn’t make it too easy. :smiley:

Add the letter “c” after the third letter in each word to form new word

Making the lovely and talented capn two for two. (Did the longer list make a difference?)