How to Play
One Word Wonders are word puzzles where the answer is exactly one word. Decipher the image below to come up with the answer. For a better idea on how to solve this puzzle view an example. If you get stuck you can ask for help in the comments section. Hints are posted 24 hours after puzzle's publish date (if provided by author).














Huh?
edit: NM - spelling issues
Oh! Tripped over the spelling on that one. Nice though!
Thanks!
Darn spelling! Ha Ha!
I have a feeling that I would spell it wrong too if only I knew what I was supposed to be spelling
I figured out who the guy is, I haven't seen any of those since my days as a Catholic school girl and I have no idea how they fit together and what to do with the n
tried sooooo many versions of spelling. only posting hoping for a post 'n slove here.
[6] yeah the 'n' is throwing me off too. no matter what I try that is actually a known word is working. guess I'm just dense. nothing new there! :)
we are dense together then. I was hoping that walking away for a minute would help. It didn't.
Just keep in mind with spelling, that sometimes there are gsilent gletters.
[10] I know all about those cursed silent letters but I never would have guessed that that particular one would show its face here. Got it now! YAY thanks much!
any salt on who the guy is? a quick google image search produces nothing on the first 4 pages
[12] Don't let the image Rip you apart, ty throwing some confetti out of a bucket, it could help.
pppppjfdikjvifdjkpfdjkvld
love ggfgzhgdsfbnvjhgvfjkfhjbhgjhxgj
Exactly [14]
Can't say I've used that word in everyday speech for the past 4 (or more) decades - thanks for the education!
[10] Thank you for the gsilent letter, solved it 617 days later with your salt.
For future solvers, don't take the spelling of the top guy's name literally...there is no "i" in the answer, although it sounds like it...choose another short sounding vowel to replace it.
Also, do NOT concentrate on the book (hymnal) like I did....it is not part of the answer......concentrate on the church benches instead.
The answer is indeed a word I may have heard years ago in school (in the 60s), but it's pretty rare.