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Comments on Puzzle #32147: Defenestration
By Brian Bellis (mootpoint)

peek at solution       solve puzzle
  quality:   difficulty:   solvability: line & color logic only  

Puzzle Description Suppressed:Click below to view spoilers

#1: Norma Dee (norm0908) on Mar 5, 2019

Defenestration is the act of throwing someone or something out of a window. The term was coined around the time of an incident in Prague Castle in the year 1618, which became the spark that started the Thirty Years' War. Wikipedia

So be careful who you throw out of a window.
#2: Joe (infrapinklizzard) on Mar 5, 2019 [SPOILER]
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#3: Spot (Pspaughtamus) on Mar 5, 2019 [SPOILER]
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#4: Aldege Cholette (Aldege) on Mar 6, 2019
Wow Juli, I hope I never get defenestrated anywhere near Germany. Cool puzzle Brian.
#5: Bill Eisenmann (Bullet) on Mar 6, 2019
There is a medical term called LD50 (LD standing for Lethal Dose, 50 is the percentage of people who die). The LD50 for aspirin for a rat, for example, is 200mg/kg (200 mg of aspirin per kilogram of body weight), so giving 100 rats weighing 0.5 kg each 100mg of aspirin, 50 of them would die.

The LD50 for Sodium Chloride (table salt) for a human is 12357 mg/kg. So if 10 220 lb men ate 2.64 kg (just under 6 lbs) of salt each, 5 of them would die.

Now for the relevant part: The LD50 for defenestration is (believe it or not) 5 stories!
#6: Lollipop (lollipop) on Mar 6, 2019
Hard to believe that there was once a time when Latin was studied as a matter of course in high school and was an option in university. Dredged up from the dark recesses of my memory and from six years of Latin studies (prose *and* poetry): the Latin word for window is fenestra.
#7: Jota (jota) on Mar 6, 2019
It also means, at least in Spanish, to remove someone from his position.
#8: Belita (belita) on Mar 6, 2019
The word "fenestration" is still used in architecture. Especially when you want to impress someone.
#9: W. Brayton Batson (batsonb) on Mar 6, 2019
I learned about this word when I helped chaperone my son's German Club trip to Europe. We visited the castle where the defenestration occurred.
#10: Ga Hendrick (GaHendrick) on Mar 6, 2019 [SPOILER]
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#11: Teresa K (fasstar) on Mar 6, 2019
Oh my! Oh my! Oh my!

The first one is for the fun puzzle. The second is for the cool/weird new word. The third is for the amazing comments.

I love webpbn. Where else can I come and instantly have all my troubles just fly out the window! You guys are the best.
#12: Aurelian Ginkgo (AurelianGinkgo) on Mar 7, 2019
First of all, I love your comment Teresa. To quote, "all my troubles just fly out the window".

Second, I clicked on this puzzle just to see how it would be illustrated. I actually found a way to use this word in my novel, so I knew what it meant already. It is one of my favorite useless words. ^-^

Lastly, #2, Joe, I know you are spinning some wordplay, but I just don't get it. Care to explain?
#13: Joe (infrapinklizzard) on Mar 7, 2019 [SPOILER]
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#14: Kathy Roth (clyde) on Mar 8, 2019
There was a building that was an artwork in San Francisco called "Defenestration", torn down a couple of years ago.......https://foursquare.com/v/defenestration/4bd5dc14cfa7b713c58f26da?openPhotoId=538e7361498e35aab0050bdf
#15: Kristen Vognild (kristen) on Mar 8, 2019 [SPOILER]
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#16: Aurelian Ginkgo (AurelianGinkgo) on Mar 8, 2019
Jamais!
#17: Andrew Schultz (blurglecruncheon) on Oct 23, 2022 [HINT] [SPOILER]
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#18: Cathy M. (holey) on Oct 9, 2023 [SPOILER]
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