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Although 'SG' appears to be the most common abbreviation for Singapore, you will find 'SN' in the CIA World Fact Book (yes, I know...), and also on acronymfinder.com, thefreedictionary.com and mytravelguide.com. Of course, had the second violinist been called- oh, I don't know, Siegfried Gnispelstein....
I hope nobody feels that they were misled.
I was just going to post Crumbs! But I had it as the crumbs mentioned in Lorca's Dona Rosita and the singular emotion as love crumbs (slang for being in unequal relationship) It seems our brains are very sharp today!
Anna - thanks to you, I've not only encountered the expression 'love crumbs' for the first time, but I've also discovered that e e cummings wrote a poem which includes a reference to 'love-crumbs '(his hyphen, not mine). The things one learns, eh?
. . . you will find 'SN' in the CIA World Fact Book (yes, I know...), and also on acronymfinder.com, thefreedictionary.com and mytravelguide.com. . . .
Thanks. Thought I had seen SN somewhere - but afterwards couldn't find it again (cf my previous post on that).
My life, each morning when I dress, is four and twenty hours less. (J Richardson)
d'Indy admired Richard Wagner but opposed the programmatic aesthetic of Richard Strauss in works such as 'Eine Alpensinfonie' (d'indy's own 'Symphonie sur un chant montagnard français' and 'Jour d ’ été à la montagne' offer an aesthetic of a non-programmatical basis);
He wrote a Lied for cello OR viola;
The three days to perform one work - hmm, this is where my logic falters. There is an asteroid called 11530 d'Indy which has an aphelion of 2.8249440, which is close to 3...
You're both warmish - Tapiola is correct that he is a composer, and Ofca has his nationality. There aren't any really cryptic clues, certainly nothing to do with astronomy, although the existence of the D'Indy asteroid is sure to prove a fascinating piece of dinner party gossip
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