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01:31I mean, honestly.
01:32Anything unusual.
01:33Have you got chocolate, vanilla?
01:34Well, they've got all those amongst a thousand.
01:36I've picked more extreme ones.
01:38All I know is that I just want more mango.
01:41And for you, you're a chocolate bro, aren't you?
01:43Well, I've had mushroom ice cream before.
01:46But it wasn't for dessert.
01:47It was with soba noodles.
01:49And it was lovely, actually.
01:50Really, really nice.
01:51But it wasn't for pudding.
01:52It was part of a whole, you know, fancy dinner.
01:54It was great.
01:55Yeah.
01:56Not by itself.
01:57Not in a cone with a flake in.
01:58Me, mango.
01:59Now, who's with us?
02:00Neil Stephenson's back with a wonderful win on Friday.
02:04Nail biting twin conundrum win.
02:07Fantastic.
02:08You came from behind, as far as I remember.
02:10Yes.
02:11A marketing director from London who grew up in Dumfries in Scotland.
02:15You had a great, great win, let me tell you.
02:17Because your contestant was a smart, a smart young lady.
02:20And you're joined by Adele Venner, an accountant from Westwood Ho in Devon.
02:24And your favourite film is Dirty Dancing.
02:26Yep.
02:27And you danced from four years old up to 18 years old.
02:30I did.
02:31Until you were 18, yeah?
02:32Yes, I did.
02:33Ballet, tap, modern, everything.
02:34Did you go into competitions and things?
02:36Festivals and shows and things, yeah.
02:38Oh, right.
02:39Now, you would have watched Strictly, I'm sure.
02:41Yes.
02:42How do you reckon our Rachel did?
02:44Oh, brilliantly.
02:45Wasn't she good?
02:46Very impressive.
02:47She was indeed.
02:48All right.
02:49Well, let's have a big round of applause for Neil and Adele.
02:56And in the corner after a restful weekend, I trust, because you've got a hurly-burly
03:00week ahead of you, Susie Dent, because you're joined by, for the first time too, by the
03:06wonderful Tim Wannacott, Bargain Hunt presenter, antiques expert and auctioneer and a good
03:12guy.
03:13Welcome to our studio.
03:14Extremely kind.
03:15In fact, too kind.
03:16Well, we'll see as we go on through the week.
03:20Let's get down to business here.
03:22Neil, how about a letters game?
03:23Sure.
03:24Hi again, Rachel.
03:25Hi, Neil.
03:26Consonant, please.
03:28Start the week with R.
03:29And another.
03:31S.
03:32And another.
03:34H.
03:35And one more.
03:38N.
03:39A vowel, please.
03:41U.
03:42And another.
03:43E.
03:44And a consonant.
03:45L.
03:46And a vowel.
03:47I.
03:48And another vowel, please.
03:49And the last one.
03:50A.
03:51And here's the countdown clock.
03:52A.
03:53A.
03:54And the last one.
03:55A.
03:56And here's the countdown clock.
03:58with the bass.
03:59Brells.
04:00And the голос.
04:01And a vowel.
04:02And a vowel.
04:03And a vowel.
04:04It'sceu.
04:05And the other.
04:06And a vowel.
04:07Italy.
04:09And the vowel.
04:10Now then, Neil.
04:31Uh, seven.
04:33A seven.
04:33Adele.
04:34Six.
04:35And that's six.
04:36Lusher.
04:37More lush.
04:38Perfect.
04:39And Neil.
04:41Inhales.
04:42Very good.
04:43And what of the corner?
04:44What news?
04:45Tim.
04:45Well, how about inhalers?
04:48Very good.
04:48Yes.
04:49I mean, nearly.
04:51Very good.
04:52Well, any chance.
04:53Susie.
04:54Um, and slightly more painful seven hernias are there.
04:57Yes, indeed.
04:58Thank you for that, Susie.
05:00Well done, uh, Tim.
05:01Now, Adele.
05:03Letters came.
05:04Hi there, Rachel.
05:05Hi, Adele.
05:05Uh, consonant, please.
05:07Start with T.
05:08And another.
05:11N.
05:12And another.
05:14L.
05:15And a vowel.
05:17O.
05:18And another vowel.
05:20I.
05:21And a consonant.
05:23F.
05:24And another consonant.
05:26P.
05:28A vowel.
05:30O.
05:31And another vowel, please.
05:33And the last one.
05:35E.
05:35Stand by.
05:36D
05:39C.
05:40oe y.
05:41C.
05:41O.
05:46E.
05:46Adele.
06:08Six.
06:09A six.
06:10Neil.
06:10Six.
06:11Adele.
06:12Option.
06:13And?
06:14Lotion.
06:14Lotion.
06:16Yes.
06:16Lotion.
06:17Very good.
06:18What else have we got?
06:19Susie?
06:20Potion and lotion, yes.
06:22And to join the six is two of my favourite words, footle and pootle.
06:26Pootle?
06:27Yes.
06:27Pootle along.
06:29Pootle about.
06:29And footle means the same thing.
06:31It's described as engaging in fruitless activities.
06:34So messing about, basically.
06:35I'm an expert at that.
06:3713 points to Adele.
06:39Six.
06:40So, Neil, first numbers game of the week.
06:43Take it away.
06:44Let's try four large again, please.
06:45Thank you, Neil.
06:46Four from the top row.
06:47And two little ones kick us off this week.
06:50And this selection is seven and nine.
06:53And as we know, the four large, fifty, seventy-five, twenty-five, and one hundred.
07:00And the target, seven hundred and forty-six.
07:02Seven, four, six.
07:03One, three, once.
07:05Two, one, four, five.
07:05Two, three, one, seven, one.
07:06Sixty-five, two, nine, one.
07:07One, three, ten.
07:08One, three, one, one.
07:08Two, one, three, two.
07:09One, three, seven, ten.
07:09One, four, five, four, five.
07:10Neil.
07:36743.
07:37743.
07:38No written down.
07:39And Adele.
07:40747.
07:42747.
07:44Come on, Adele.
07:467 times 100 is 700.
07:487, 100, 700.
07:50Add the 50.
07:51750.
07:51And then 75 over 25 is 3.
07:54Yep.
07:54And take it away.
07:55Well done.
07:55747.
07:56Very good.
07:57But not perfect.
07:59746.
08:00How tricky is that?
08:01Actually, I think it was perfect because I think that's the closest you can get.
08:04So well done, Adele.
08:05Excellent.
08:06Well, well done, Adele.
08:07Now, what do we have?
08:08A tea-time teaser with a score standing at 13 all.
08:13And the teaser is user stab.
08:15And the clue, the user has a stab at understanding the instructions, but they're so complicated.
08:21The user has a stab at understanding the instructions, but they're so complicated.
08:25And the answer is abstruse.
08:50Abstruse.
08:52Now, give us a little definition of that, would you?
08:53Yeah.
08:54Difficult to understand or obscure.
08:56So the example is an abstruse philosophical inquiry.
09:00Indeed.
09:01Thank you, Susie.
09:02Thank you, indeed.
09:03Scores standing at 13 apiece.
09:05And we turn to Adele for a letters game.
09:08Adele.
09:09Consonant, please, Rachel.
09:10Thank you, Adele.
09:11D.
09:12And another.
09:13R.
09:15And another.
09:17X.
09:19And another consonant.
09:21M.
09:22Vowel.
09:24U.
09:25And another.
09:26A.
09:27And another.
09:29O.
09:31And a consonant.
09:33S.
09:35And a vowel, please.
09:37And the last one, I.
09:39Stand by.
09:40And a vowel, please.
10:11Adele.
10:12Six.
10:13Six.
10:14Adele.
10:15Axioms.
10:17And Neil.
10:18Radium.
10:19Radium.
10:21Absolutely fine.
10:23And what else have we got over in the corner there?
10:26Tim, Susie?
10:27Well, if you're feeling affectionate, you might have some amours.
10:30Yes.
10:31Why don't you?
10:32Yes.
10:32I hope so.
10:33Secret lovers.
10:34Secret lovers.
10:34Always looking for that.
10:36And Susie?
10:36I was sticking with radios for another six.
10:40Radios.
10:41All right.
10:42Nineteen apiece.
10:44And now it's Neil's letters game.
10:46Neil.
10:47Consonant, please.
10:48Thank you, Neil.
10:49T.
10:50And another.
10:50S.
10:53And another.
10:55R.
10:57And a vowel.
10:59A.
11:00Another.
11:01E.
11:02And another vowel.
11:04O.
11:05And the last one.
11:17I.
11:19Stand by.
11:20I don't know.
11:37A.
11:37A.
11:44A.
11:48A.
11:48Yes, Neil.
11:53Eight.
11:54Seven.
11:55And you're seven, Adele.
11:57Rotates.
11:58Neil.
11:59Wattiest.
12:02Are we happy there?
12:04If you're unlucky, you can be the wattiest person around, yes.
12:08It's in the dictionary.
12:09Very good.
12:10Now, Tim.
12:11How about tastier?
12:14Indeed.
12:15Thank you very much.
12:16Twenty-seven to Neil.
12:17Adele on 19, and now it's numbers time for Adele.
12:22Can I have one large and five small, please, Rachel?
12:24You can indeed, thank you, Adele.
12:25One large one, five little ones this time.
12:28And for this round, the small numbers are nine, four, six, eight, three, and the big one, 25.
12:37And the target, 972.
12:40972.
13:11Adele?
13:12Nine, six, eight.
13:13Nine, six, eight.
13:14How about Neil?
13:15Nine, seven, five.
13:17Nine, seven, five.
13:19So, Neil.
13:21Nine times three is 27.
13:23Nine, three is 27.
13:25Plus six, plus four.
13:26Plus six, plus four, 37.
13:28Uh, I've gone wrong, I believe.
13:33Gone wrong.
13:34Bad luck.
13:35Adele?
13:36Actually, I've gone wrong.
13:37I've used the six twice.
13:38Oh.
13:39Oh, dear.
13:39That's a calamity.
13:41We must throw ourselves at the mercy of Rachel.
13:44Rachel?
13:45Um, for this one, you could have said six divided by three is two.
13:49Add 25 for 27.
13:52And then four times nine is 36.
13:55And times them together, 972.
13:57Very good.
13:58Well done.
14:01Spot on, as always.
14:04And now we turn to Tim.
14:05And Tim, I mean, you're a hugely familiar face on television, locked into the world of antiques
14:12and auctioneering and so forth.
14:13How did this extraordinary career start on television?
14:16Well, the TV bit is seriously a strange beginning, because I just got a call out of the blue
14:22to attend an antiques roadshow, which was the mothership of all these antique shows that
14:27we see today.
14:28And, um, this very nice person said, we'd like you to go to Newcastle, Emlyn, and attend the
14:33antiques roadshow as an observer.
14:35I said, what does an observer do?
14:36They say, nothing at all.
14:37You just observe.
14:38And I said, well, really, what do you want to do is to find out how I hold my knife and
14:41fork, don't you?
14:42You want to know how I behave amongst the public?
14:44And she said, well, secretly, yes.
14:46So I pitched up, expecting to do nothing.
14:49And my friend John Bly, the furniture expert, had fallen over and broken his leg the previous
14:55week and was somewhat, um, lame.
14:58But he was there.
15:00And that morning, when he left the antiques roadshow hotel, he fell down and broke his
15:04other leg.
15:04And that meant that they didn't have a furniture expert.
15:07So instead of being an observer, I was all of a sudden number one furniture expert for
15:11Newcastle, Emlyn Antiques Roadshow, which was fine for the first hour of the recording.
15:18And then John Bly arrived with two plastered up legs.
15:22He was not going to have some whippersnapper take his job on the antiques roadshow.
15:26And then they didn't know what to do with me.
15:27So they said, why don't you go on the miscellaneous table?
15:31And I said, what's the miscellaneous table?
15:32And they said, well, that's the place where all the unusual things go that other experts
15:38don't know about.
15:39And I said, well, really, it's just a euphemism for rubbish, isn't it?
15:42And they said, well, no.
15:44And I went there.
15:45And a lady pitched up on the miscellaneous table with a golf ball.
15:49And it was an extremely rare golf ball.
15:51But when she arrived at the table, she said, I don't want to know what it's worth.
15:57So I got a cameraman.
15:58I said, would you mind saying that again?
16:00She said, I don't want to know what it's worth.
16:03I said, OK, fine.
16:04Well, I'll tell you all about it.
16:05So I captured her on film saying that.
16:08And I told her about it.
16:09I told her it was a rare golf ball.
16:11It was made in the 18th century.
16:12It was goosed down, rammed into a chamois leather bag and wet.
16:17And it was sewn up tightly.
16:19And when it dried, it expanded, except it couldn't expand.
16:22It became very hard.
16:23Then it had some goat skin sewn around the outside to give it the outer sheath.
16:28And then it had been stamped by the maker in Edinburgh, Mr Fogon.
16:31And it was a really rare thing.
16:32And by the time she'd heard all this, there was only one thing that she really wanted to know.
16:37And that was what it was worth.
16:39But I didn't tell her what it was worth.
16:41I kept teasing her until she came out with the magic words, which were, would it be worth anything?
16:46And we captured all that on film.
16:48And I said to her, actually, it's worth 15,000 to 20,000 pounds.
16:51And this is years ago.
16:53And she fell over backwards into her husband, who fell into a person who had a double base.
16:57And they fell into somebody else.
16:58So it was a kind of domino effect.
17:00And that was my first record on the Antiques Roadshow.
17:02And the next year, they asked me back, but not as an observer.
17:06Absolutely.
17:07Why not?
17:07My word.
17:08Incredible.
17:0920,000.
17:1015 to 20,000 pounds.
17:12And ultimately, actually, that woman did sell her golf ball.
17:15And it made 22,500 pounds.
17:17So it was a good ball.
17:18Good for you.
17:19Yes.
17:20And it was a good estimate as well.
17:21Thank you very much indeed.
17:23Well done, Tim.
17:23Now, Neil, now it's your letters game.
17:27Comment, please.
17:27Thank you, Neil.
17:28And the clock starts.
17:58Now.
17:58Now.
18:00Now.
18:00Now.
18:01Now.
18:22Now.
18:22Now.
18:24yes Neil a seven a seven Adele just a five and your five stone stone Neil penates thank you
18:39how you spend it's p-e-n-a-t-e-s fantastic and I didn't know these ones actually it's
18:45um penalties is how the dictionary gives us they are or they were household gods worshiped in
18:51conjunction with Vesta by the ancient Romans there we are what else we got there Tim well I got it
18:58battles yes yeah pass the battle yep several of them very good and I just have been o's for six
19:05so we were well beaten there very good well done Neil now then Adele letters time consonant please
19:13great tool thank you don't n and another C and another s and another h and a vowel I and another
19:30U and another O a consonant L and a final vowel please and a final E stand by
19:44so
19:51so
19:58Adele.
20:17A seven.
20:17A seven.
20:18Yes, Neil?
20:19Just a six.
20:20And your six?
20:21Slouch.
20:22Slouch.
20:23Adele?
20:24Cushion.
20:25Cushion.
20:27There we are.
20:28Nothing to squabble about there.
20:30Tim?
20:31Susie?
20:32Gosh, it goes quickly this time, doesn't it?
20:35How about lunches?
20:38Yes.
20:39Why not?
20:39Time for some lunches.
20:41Susie?
20:42I've just got five, and I don't know, Tim, if you've seen one of these.
20:46It's a cuish.
20:47It can be called a cuish, or a cuish, which is C-U-I-S-H, and it was a piece of armour for the thigh.
20:55Not a thing I'd ever seen, I don't think.
20:57Thank you very much.
20:58Thirty-four to twenty-six.
21:00Now it's numbers time.
21:01Numbers for Neil.
21:03Let's see if I can get one of these right.
21:04Four large, please.
21:05Another four large.
21:05Keep persevering.
21:06Thank you, Neil.
21:07Four large and two little ones, and we will try for a possible one this time.
21:11These two little ones are three and eight.
21:13And the four large, twenty-five, fifty, seventy-five, one hundred, nicely in order.
21:19And the target, eight hundred and forty-five.
21:21Eight, four, five.
21:22One, two, three.
21:23One, two, three.
21:24One, two, three.
21:25One, two, three.
21:26One, two, three.
21:27One, two, three.
21:28One, two, three.
21:29One, two, three.
21:30One, two, three.
21:31One, two, three.
21:32One, two, three.
21:33One, two, three.
21:34One, two, three.
21:35One, two, three.
21:36One, two, three.
21:37One, two, three.
21:38One, two, three.
21:39One, two, three.
21:40One, two, three.
21:41One, two, three.
21:42One, two, three.
21:43One, two, three.
21:44One, two, three.
21:45One, two, three.
21:46One, two, three.
21:47One, two, three.
21:48One, two, three.
21:49Yes, Neil.
21:55844, now written down.
21:57One away. Adele.
21:59844, written down.
22:00So, Neil.
22:02So, 8 times 100.
22:048 times 100, 800.
22:07And 50, 850.
22:0975 over 25 is 3.
22:10Yep.
22:11And take that away, and the other 3.
22:12Take the 2 3s away for 1 away, 844.
22:15Yep.
22:16Adele.
22:17Same way.
22:17Same route.
22:18There we are.
22:19But how tricky is 845, Rachel?
22:23Pretty tricky.
22:24I'll have another look.
22:25Shall I leave it with you?
22:25Leave it with me.
22:26All right.
22:27There we go.
22:27Now, let's have a tea time teaser,
22:30with the score standing at 41 to Adele's 33.
22:34And the teaser is cola ices,
22:36and the clue, cola and ices are two things
22:39these people can digest comfortably.
22:41Cola and ices are two things
22:43these people can digest comfortably.
22:49And the answer is celiacs.
22:57Suzy, celiacs.
22:58Tell us more.
22:59Warm welcome back.
23:03I left with a clue.
23:04Cola and ices are two things
23:05these people can digest comfortably.
23:08And the answer is celiacs.
23:11Suzy, celiacs.
23:12Tell us more.
23:13Yeah, there are people with celiac disease,
23:15which is, um, it's not very nice.
23:17It's a disease with a small intestine,
23:18and they're highly sensitive to gluten,
23:21so they have to live gluten-free.
23:23I see.
23:24Celiacs.
23:25Now then, 41 to Adele's 33.
23:28Adele, you're back on.
23:30Letters came.
23:31Consolant, please, Rachel.
23:32Thank you, Adele.
23:33S.
23:34And another.
23:36T.
23:37And another.
23:39C.
23:40And a vowel.
23:42I.
23:43And another.
23:44A.
23:45And another.
23:47E.
23:49And a consonant.
23:51N.
23:54A consonant.
23:56Y.
23:57And a final vowel, please.
23:59And a final I.
24:00Stand by.
24:11Adele.
24:34Just a five.
24:35And Neil.
24:36Six.
24:37Six.
24:38Adele.
24:38Stain.
24:39Stain and?
24:40And ticks.
24:42Good words.
24:43Yeah.
24:43Very good.
24:44And in the corner, Tim.
24:46How about scanty?
24:48Yes.
24:48Scanty's all right.
24:50Very good.
24:51Susie?
24:51Just another six.
24:52Stance.
24:54Stance.
24:54Your position or something is your stance.
24:55Awkward stance.
24:56All right.
24:5747 plays 33.
24:59Neil.
25:00How about a letters game?
25:02Consolant, please.
25:03Thank you, Neil.
25:04S.
25:05And another.
25:07R.
25:09And another.
25:10D.
25:11And another consonant.
25:14G.
25:16A vowel.
25:17A.
25:18And another.
25:19U.
25:20And another.
25:22O.
25:24One more, please.
25:26Another A.
25:27And a consonant.
25:30And the last one, R.
25:32And here's the countdown clock.
25:34One more, please.
25:35One more, please.
25:36One more, please.
25:36One more, please.
25:37One more, please.
25:37One more, please.
25:38One more, please.
25:38One more, please.
25:39One more, please.
25:39One more, please.
25:39One more, please.
25:40One more, please.
25:40One more, please.
25:41One more, please.
25:41One more, please.
25:41One more, please.
25:41One more, please.
25:42One more, please.
25:43One more, please.
25:43One more, please.
25:44One more, please.
25:44One more, please.
25:45One more, please.
25:45One more, please.
25:46One more, please.
25:46One more, please.
25:47One more, please.
25:47One more, please.
25:48One more, please.
25:49One more, please.
25:49One more, please.
25:50Neil.
26:06Six.
26:07Six.
26:07Adele.
26:08Six.
26:08Neil.
26:09Guards.
26:10Guards and both of you.
26:11Same word.
26:12Any more guards in the corner, Tim?
26:14We got it to guard, but what about Rugoza?
26:17I don't know.
26:19Lovely, yes.
26:20It's an Asian rose with dark green leaves and deep pink flowers used as a hedging plant.
26:24Oh, well done.
26:25Very good.
26:26And lots of prickles.
26:27Very good.
26:28Very good.
26:2953 plays 39, and now we turn to Susie.
26:34Tim, you like this.
26:35It's Susie's Origins of Words.
26:37It's a treat.
26:38Oh, here we go.
26:40No pressure.
26:41Well, on Friday, I was talking about first names and how they've sort of travelled through history
26:47and the first names that we have today are compared with those in medieval times.
26:50But there are a lot of personal names in the dictionary as well, so I thought I would just
26:54give you a bit of a taste of the words that you will find in there.
26:57Jack and Jill have been sort of the prototype, really, for a man and woman for a very, very
27:04long time.
27:05They replaced Tom and Tib, which you would get in the 14th and 15th centuries.
27:10But Jack, particularly, was used as the name for the common, the generic man, if you like,
27:17which is why we have Jack of all trades, Jack Tar, the sailor, Lumberjack, Steeplejack,
27:22et cetera.
27:24We have the Jack in the Box, the toy, and we also have Doll, incidentally, which is a pet
27:28form of Dorothy.
27:30So Dorothy was quite popular for a while.
27:31But these are personal names for objects as being quite popular over history as well.
27:37So the spinning jemmy.
27:39You have the jemmy, which was the burglar's crowbar, the famous crowbar.
27:44That's a pet form of James.
27:46And there's a long-standing practice as well of christening machines with personal names
27:51and artillery as well.
27:53So large bells are often called Tom.
27:55We have Big Ben.
27:57We have the great Tom of Oxford as well.
27:59But the great guns and the bombs, strangely, have always been female.
28:03And I've mentioned before in the programme that gun goes back to a siege engine that was
28:08called Lady Gunnhild.
28:10And that's where we get our current guns from.
28:13It could go on and on.
28:14But first names in the dictionary, there are so many of them.
28:17Very good.
28:19Well done, Susie.
28:21As ever.
28:23And of course, in the First World War, the Germans had a big gun called Big Bertha.
28:28Do you remember that?
28:29And they could fire a shell across the channel.
28:33Big Bertha.
28:34Yes.
28:34And it was on a railway track in order to deal with the recoil.
28:37It was a monster.
28:38Bertha.
28:40And cars are always she's as well, aren't they?
28:41Cars are always female.
28:42Do you have pet names for your cars?
28:44Yeah.
28:45I've got another car.
28:46She'll call it Susie.
28:48It's a flighty little thing.
28:49An old banger.
28:50Hey.
28:51It's not an old banger.
28:5453 to 39.
28:55Adele on 39.
28:56And it's Adele's letters game.
28:58Consonant, please, Rachel.
28:59Thank you, Adele.
29:00N.
29:01And another.
29:01D.
29:04And another.
29:06B.
29:07And one more.
29:09R.
29:10And a vowel.
29:11E.
29:13And another vowel.
29:15I.
29:17Another vowel.
29:19A.
29:21Consonant.
29:23M.
29:24And a vowel, please.
29:26And the last one.
29:28E.
29:29And here's the clock.
29:30E.
29:30And here's the clock.
29:54Yes, Adele.
30:02Seven.
30:03A seven.
30:03Neil.
30:04Eighth.
30:05Mm-hmm.
30:05Adele.
30:06Bendia.
30:07Bendia and?
30:08Remained.
30:09Remained.
30:10Very good.
30:12Yes.
30:12Remained.
30:14Any advances on remained?
30:15Tim, Susie?
30:16I don't think there's any advances, though.
30:18No, we were with sevens on that one.
30:20That's it.
30:2161 plays 39.
30:23Neil.
30:23Final letters game for today.
30:26Uh, consonant, please.
30:27Thank you, Neil.
30:28G.
30:29And another one.
30:31T.
30:32Another.
30:34N.
30:35And another.
30:37W.
30:38Uh, vowel, please.
30:40A.
30:41Another one.
30:42U.
30:43Um, another vowel.
30:45B.
30:47Uh, consonant, please.
30:49R.
30:51And a vowel.
30:53And the last one.
30:55I.
30:56Stand by.
30:57B.
30:57B.
30:57B.
30:57And a vowel.
30:58And a vowel.
30:59And a vowel.
30:59And a vowel.
31:00And a vowel.
31:00And a vowel.
31:01And a vowel.
31:01And a vowel.
31:01And a vowel.
31:02And a vowel.
31:02And a vowel.
31:03And a vowel.
31:03And a vowel.
31:03And a vowel.
31:03And a vowel.
31:04And a vowel.
31:04And a vowel.
31:04And a vowel.
31:04And a vowel.
31:05And a vowel.
31:05And a vowel.
31:05And a vowel.
31:06And a vowel.
31:06And a vowel.
31:07And a vowel.
31:07And a vowel.
31:07And a vowel.
31:08And a vowel.
31:08And a vowel.
31:09And a vowel.
31:09And a vowel.
31:10And a vowel.
31:11And a vowel.
31:11And a vowel.
31:12And a vowel.
31:12And a vowel.
31:12And a vowel.
31:27yes neil eight and eight adele six you're six waiter neil watering watering fantastic very
31:41strong performance well done now 69 please 39 as we lunge into the final numbers game adele
31:50two large and four small please thank you adele too big four little for the final time today
31:55and this selection is two five seven another two and the large one's 25 and 50.
32:03and the target 313. three one three
32:25three one three three one three three one three two three one three so adele
32:4450 take five is 45 45 times seven three one five and then take two perfect three one three
32:52yes neil slightly longer way around uh 50 times seven 350 yeah minus 25 minus five five times two is ten
33:01yep and minus that and two and the other two three one three again lovely well done
33:14two good results there 79 plays 49 as we go into the final round conundrum time so neil and adele
33:21fingers on buzzers please let's reveal today's countdown conundrum
33:30my word neil mystified mystified good lord let's see whether you're right fantastic
33:38probably in about two seconds that's extraordinary well done and a great performance neil 89 so we
33:50shall see you tomorrow adele sadly we will not see you tomorrow 49 is good but my word he's very
33:54quick he is a bit of a conundrum expert this one so uh will you take this goodie bag back to westward
34:01ho thank you pleasure to have you here we'll see you tomorrow and we shall see susie and tim tomorrow
34:07too more stories from the sale room from tim great fun having you here we shall see you tomorrow see
34:13you then rachel joins tomorrow see how neil gets on with his conundrums tomorrow same time same place
34:19you be sure of it a very good afternoon contact us by email at countdown at channel 4.com by twitter
34:26at c4 countdown or write to us at countdown leads ls3 1js you can also find our webpage at channel 4.com
34:34forward slash countdown
34:40they share a passion for tattoos so will their first date leave a lasting impression the new series
34:46of the undateables continues tonight at nine and who's no got marked out today i wonder deal or no deal
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