Going CA-CA

Making great wordplay with lexagrams uses many types of language skills. Success involves more than having a large vocabulary – it helps to recognize letter patterns and to visualize how words interact. To help build these skills, take a look at his great puzzle quiz.

Each answer is a familiar two-word phrase in which both words start with the letter pattern CA. Example: Holder for a laptop computer or other portable equipment: Carrying case.

  1. Mode of transportation in San Francisco.
  2. Sweet found in a Christmas stocking.
  3. Feline with black, yellow, and white coloring.
  4. Slang for a theatrical audition that’s open to everyone.
  5. Where NASA blasts off.
  6. Bandleader who wrote “Minnie the Moocher.”
  7. TV show hosted by Alan Funt.
  8. Old-fashioned place to look up things in a library.
  9. National park in New Mexico.
  10. Chalk or limestone, chemically.
  11. Dessert item that contains orange specks.
  12. Latin for “beware of the dogs.”
  13. In bygone times, something a visitor left when a person wasn’t home.

Do your best and check the answers below. If you want more puzzles like this, then take a look at the book!

 

Quoted from Will Shortz’s Mind Games: 100 Alphabet Riddles by Will Shortz. A long-time puzzlemaster for National Public Radio, Shortz has created many styles of word games. One of his more popular puzzles is the Alphabet Riddle where every answer is a familiar phrase having the same initials.

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  1. Cable car
  2. Candy cane
  3. Calico cat
  4. Cattle call
  5. Cape Canaveral
  6. Cab Calloway
  7. Candid Camera 
  8. Card catalog
  9. Carlsbad Caverns
  10. Calcium carbonate
  11. Carrot cake
  12. Cave canem
  13. Calling card.

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