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  • Welcome to weekly newsletter of Lexulous!

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    [image: 1775890873509-Lexbuzz_Edition_-_21.jpg] Hello Lexulous Community! This week of April brings something rather magical to mind. Across Japan, families are gathering beneath canopies of pale pink blossoms for hanami — the centuries-old tradition of cherry blossom viewing. In Washington D.C., the famous Tidal Basin is once again ringed in soft pink and white. In Amsterdam, the Keukenhof gardens have thrown open their gates. Spring has a way of arriving like a favourite poem: quietly, breathtakingly, and just when you needed it most. It also happens to be a week of cosmic significance — but more on that in a moment. First, a word that beautifully bridges the season and the stars... Weekly Word Wonder: CREPUSCULAR There is a precise and beautiful word for that particular quality of light that falls between day and night — the hour when the sky turns amber and violet, when the first stars tentatively appear, and when certain creatures come quietly alive: Pronunciation: kreh-PUS-kyoo-lar Definition: Of, resembling, or relating to the light of twilight — that dim, luminous hour between day and night (Zoology) Describing animals that are most active at dawn and dusk, such as deer, rabbits, moths, and owls Origin: From Latin crepusculum (twilight), itself from creper (dusky, dark, uncertain). The same root gives us crepuscule, a rare but beautiful English synonym for twilight. First recorded in English: Mid-17th century Usage: "The deer emerged silently from the treeline in the crepuscular hour, silhouetted perfectly against a sky still warm from the setting sun." "Moths are crepuscular creatures, stirring only as daylight surrenders to dusk and the evening air grows cool and sweet." 65 Years of Human Spaceflight On April 12, 1961 — sixty-five years ago — a 27-year-old Soviet Air Force pilot named Yuri Gagarin climbed into a spherical capsule barely wider than a bathtub, strapped himself in, and hurtled into the unknown. His flight lasted 108 minutes. One orbit. He saw the curvature of the Earth. He saw the silence of space. He saw home from a place no human had ever seen it before. When he returned — parachuting separately from his capsule and landing in a farmer's field in the Saratov region — he became the most famous human alive overnight. April 12 is now observed as Yuri's Night and the International Day of Human Space Flight, a day to celebrate not just one man's extraordinary journey, but the enduring human impulse to look upward and wonder. Sixty-five years on, humans have walked on the Moon, lived aboard orbiting stations for months at a time, sent rovers to Mars, and glimpsed the edges of our galaxy through space telescopes. It all started with 108 minutes and one remarkable young man who trusted the stars. Did You Know? The word countdown was not invented by scientists — it was invented by a filmmaker. German director Fritz Lang introduced the dramatic pre-launch count in his 1929 silent film Frau im Mond (Woman in the Moon). He reversed the count — ending on zero rather than starting from it — purely for cinematic tension. Real rocket engineers found it so compelling that they simply adopted it, and it has been the language of launches ever since. Community Puzzle: Cryptic Clues Three space-themed cryptic clues this week — can you crack all three? Post your answers in the comments! 1. "Incompetent stargazer's cloud? Rearrange the evidence! (6)" 2. "Polar light display: Latin gold precedes a prayer (6)" 3. "Astronomical turning point: COIL SETS all in a muddle (8)" (Scroll down for last week's answers!) Last Week's Answers (Edition #20 — Cryptic Clues) SPRING KITTEN ALLOY The cherry blossoms will fall within days. The stars will be out tonight. And somewhere above us, the legacy of one remarkable 108-minute journey is still quietly orbiting us all. See you next week — keep playing, keep exploring. — The Lexulous Team
  • General announcements from the Lexulous team

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    Thanks for the update! The new game rooms sound exciting, and I’d love to join the closed-group Beta Test. Count me in!
  • Information for those who are new to Lexulous

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    How do I switch UK games to US?
  • Have any suggestions to make? This is the place!

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    Currently, is it possible to download archival information (e.g., game scores, bingos) for further analysis? If not, would this feature be possible? For games, it would be helpful to include opponent identifiers so that results could be sorted or filtered accordingly in a spreadsheet or database.
  • Ask for playing tips, find solutions or share your ideas!

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    Who can I ask about losing points from my standing, after a loss of connection (not on my end)?
  • You are welcome to post your creative writings.

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    I hope Elon Musk never gets involved in a scandal. Elongate would be really drawn out. (Not sure of the source :)
  • Sign up to help the Lex community!

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    Hey everyone, I’m new here on lexulous! Excited to join the community and dive into discussions. I’m a big fan of Wordle and love word games in general. Looking forward to connecting with fellow members! 😊