The -Gry Puzzle is a popular puzzle that asks for the third English word, other than "angry" and "hungry," that ends with the letters "gry." Aside from words derived from "angry" and "hungry," there is no stand-alone word ending in "gry" that is in current usage. Both Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged (Merriam-Webster, Inc., 2002, ISBN 0877792011) and the Oxford English Dictionary, Second Edition (Oxford University Press, 1989, ISBN 0198611862) contain the phrase "aggry bead." To find a third word ending in "gry" that is not part of a phrase, you must turn to obsolete words or personal or place names. A list of 130 of these is given at the end of this article.
So, basically, this puzzle has no good answer. Yet it has become the most frequently asked word puzzle. It is so common that it is a standing joke on the Stumpers reference librarian list server [http://domin.dom.edu/depts/gslis/stumpers/ that it's time to change your car's oil when it is asked anew. The regular readers of the Usenet newsgroup rec.puzzles coined the word "nugry" [http://groups.google.com/groups?q=gry+limerick&hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&selm=638539%24bsv%241%40nntp.Stanford.EDU&rnum=1 to describe a (presumably) new reader who posts a frequently asked question.
Merriam-Webster, publishers of the leading American dictionaries, first heard of this puzzle in a Lasker.pdf dated March 17, 1975, from Patricia Lasker of Brooklyn, New York. Lasker says her Plant Manager heard the question on a quiz show. Since that time Merriam-Webster has received about four letters per year asking the question.
This puzzle first appears in print in Anita Richterman's Richterman1.png in Newsday on April 29, 1975. One "M.Z." from Wantagh states that the problem was asked on a TV quiz program. Richterman states that she asked a learned professor of English for help when she first received the inquiry, and he did not respond for over a month. So the quiz show probably occurred in March.
In Anita Richterman's Richterman2.png on May 9, 1975, several correspondents reported that they had heard the puzzle on the Bob Grant radio talk show on WMCA in New York City. However, as this is not a TV quiz show, this may not be the origin of the puzzle. The majority of readers gave the answer "gry," one of the obsolete words listed at the end of this article. It is unclear whether this was the answer given on the Grant show.
Ralph G. Beaman in the "Kickshaws" column in Word Ways for February 1976 reports that the Delaware Valley was mystified during the Fall of 1975 by the question. By this time the puzzle seems to have mutated to a form in which the missing word is an adjective that describes the state of the world.
However, some people remember a different version of this puzzle dating it back before 1975. For example, someone named "Rush Elkins" emailed the editors of yourDictionary with this report:
If these memories are accurate, then perhaps in 1975 a subtle flaw was introduced into an otherwise commonplace word puzzle. Instead of asking for three words that contain "gry," the flawed version asks for three words that end in "gry." Presumably the person who asked the question did not know the answer and, in repeating the question, simply misstated it. Since the flawed version has no good answer, an explosion of searching followed.
Some of the trick versions are enumerated below.
The remaining versions are a form of meta-puzzle, in the sense that they make no use of the actual letters "gry" themselves, which therefore are a red herring. The red herring only works because there is another puzzle that does use these letters (even though that puzzle has no good answer).
of references is given at the end of the list.This list was gathered from the following articles:affect-hungry (see "sado-masochism") aggry W2; W3 Agry (see "snappily") Agry Dagh (Mount Agry) * ahungry FW; W2 air-hungry (see "Tel Avivian") angry FW; W2; W3 anhungry W2 Badagry EB11; OED (see "Dahoman") Ballingry CLG:151; RD:164, pl.49 begry * bewgry * boroughmongry (see "boroughmonger") bowgry * braggry * Bugry * Chockpugry * Cogry * cony-gry * conyngry * cottagry (see "cottagery") Croftangry as "Chrystal Croftangry"; OED (see "way") diamond-hungry (see "Lorelei") dog-hungry * dogge-hungry (see "canine") Dshagry * Dzagry * eard-hungry (see "yird"); CSD Echanuggry on inset map, Key 104 M 2 Egry TIG euer-angry (see "ever") ever-angry * fenegry (see "fenugreek") fire-angry * Gagry * girl-hungry (see "girl") gonagry (see "gonagra") gry (from Latin _gry_) W2 gry (from Romany _grai_) * haegry (see "hagery") half-angry * hangry * heart-angry * heart-hungry * higry pigry * hogry (see "huggerie"); CSD hogrymogry (see "huggerie"); CSD (as "hogry-mogry") hongry EDD:3:282 hound-hungry (see "hound") houngry (see "minx") huggrymuggry (see "huggerie"); CSD (as "huggry-muggry") hund-hungry (see "hound") hungry FW; W2; W3 Hungry Bungry Illini, in ad for The Giraffe, Spring 1976 hwngry (see "quart") iggry * Jagry * job-hungry (see "gadget") kaingry (see "caingy") land-hungry W2 Langry Times leather-hungry * ledderhungry (see "leather") life-hungry (see "music") Lisnagry * losengry (see "losengery") MacLoingry (as "Flaithbhertach MacLoingry") mad-angry * mad-hungry * magry 6/2:247-48 malgry * man-hungry * managry (see "managery") mannagry (see "managery") Margry (see "Pierre Margry" in bibliog., v.2, p.1204) maugry * mawgry * meagry * meat-hungry OED (see "meat") menagry (see "managery") messagry * music-hungry (see "music") nangry * overangry RH2 Pelegry (in main index as "Raymond de Pelegry") Pingry HPS:293-94, 120-21 Podagry W2 (below the line) Pongry (Supplement, p.572) pottingry Jamieson:3:532 power-hungry (see "power") profit-hungry (see "profit") puggry FW; W2 pugry * red-angry (see "sanguineous") rungry * scavengry (in 1715 quote under "scavengery") Schtschigry OSN:97 Seagry EB11 Segry Andree self-angry * selfe-angry (see "self-") sensation-hungry (see "sensation") sex-angry (see "sex") sex-hungry (see "cave") Shchigry Johnson:594; OSN:97,206; Times:185,pl.45 shiggry * Shtchigry LG/2:1701 Shtshigry * sight-hungry (see "sight") skugry 9/1:297; Jamieson:4:266 Sygry * Tangry * Tchangry LG/1:435,1117 Tchigry * tear-angry * th'angry (see "shot-free") tike-hungry * Tingry EB11 (under "Princesse de Tingry"); OED (see "parquet") toggry (as "Toggry", but all entries are capitalized) ulgry Smith:24-25 unangry W2 vergry * Vigry * vngry (see "wretch") war-hungry (see "war") Wigry NAP:xxxix; Times:220, pl.62; WA:948 wind-hungry * yeard-hungry (see "yird") yerd-hungry (see "yird"); OED yird-hungry (see "yird") Ymagry (col. 3, 1st "boss" verb), (variant of "imagery")
(Many references are of the form or [Source:page.)
Andree, Richard. Andrees Handatlas (index volume). 1925. Bartholomew, John. Gazetteer of the British Isles: Statistical and Topographical. 1887. BBC = BBC Pronouncing Dictionary of English Names. Bio-Base. (Microfiche) Detroit: Gale Research Company. 1980. CE = Catholic Encyclopedia. 1907. CED = Chambers English Dictionary. 1988. Century = "India, Northern Part." The Century Atlas of the World. 1897, 1898. CLG = The Colombia Lippincott Gazetteer of the World. L.E.Seltzer, ed. 1952. CSD = Chambers Scots Dictionary. 1971 reprint of 1911 edition. Daily Illini (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign). DFC = Dictionary of Fictional Characters. 1963. EB11 = Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th ed. EDD = The English Dialect Dictionary. Joseph Wright, ed. 1898. France = Map Index of France. G.H.Q. American Expeditionary Forces. 1918. FW = Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary of the English Language. 1943. HPS = The Handbook of Private Schools: An Annual Descriptive Survey of Independent Education, 66th ed. 1985. Indians = Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico. F. W. Hodge. 1912. Jamieson, John. An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language. 1879-87. Johnston, Keith. Index Geographicus... 1864. LG/1 = Lippincott's Gazetteer of the World: A Complete Pronouncing Gazetteer or Geographical Dictionary of the World. 1888. LG/2 = Lippincott's New Gazetteer: ... 1906. Lipp = Lippincott's Pronouncing Gazetteer of the World. 1861, undated edition from late 1800's; 1902. NAP = Narodowy Atlas Polski. 1973-1978 language OED = The Oxford English Dictionary. 1933. OED:volume/part number if applicable:page OSN: U.S.S.R. Volume 6, S-T. Official Standard Names Approved by the United States Board on Geographic Names. Gazetteer #42, 2nd ed. June 1970. Partridge, Harry B. "Ad Memoriam Demetrii." Word Ways, 19 (Aug. 1986): 131. Phillips, Lawrence. Dictionary of Biographical Reference. 1889. RD = The Reader's Digest Complete Atlas of the British Isles, 1st ed. 1965. RH1 = Random House Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged. 1966. RH2 = Random House Dictionary of the English Language, Second Edition Unabridged. 1987. Simmonds, P.L. Commercial Dictionary of Trade Products. 1883. Smith, John. The True Travels, Adventvres and Observations: London 1630. Stieler, Adolph. Stieler's Handatlas (index volume). 1925. TIG = The Times Index-Gazetteer of the World. 1965. Times = The Times Atlas of the World, 7th ed. 1985. W2 = Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language, Second Edition, Unabridged. 1934. W3 = Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged. 1961. WA = The World Atlas: Index-Gazetteer. Council of Ministries of the USSR, 1968. Worcester, J.E. Universal Gazetteer, Second Edition. 1823.