Snake sound

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Possible Answers: SSS, HISS, RATTLE, SISS.

Last seen on: –Newsday.com Crossword – Apr 5 2022s
Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Nov 27 2019

Random information on the term “SSS”:

The SSS islands is an acronym which refers to three island territories in the Lesser Antilles that are under Dutch sovereignty:

Sint Maarten is a constituent country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and is the southern half of the island of Saint Martin (the northern half is the French Collectivity of Saint Martin). The islands of Saba and Sint Eustatius are public bodies of the Netherlands.

The acronym is analogous to the ABC islands, consisting of Aruba, Bonaire and Curaçao, and the BES islands, consisting of Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba, both of which are also part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. All six island territories were formerly part of the Netherlands Antilles.

Saint Martin was split between the Netherlands and France in 1648. The Dutch part became a single Dutch colony in 1818 as Sint Eustatius and Dependencies when France returned its possessions after the Napoleonic Wars. This colony was merged in 1828 with the colonies Curaçao and Dependencies (the ABC islands) and Suriname with a capital in Paramaribo. When this merge was partly reversed in 1845, the Dutch part of the SSS islands became part of Curaçao and Dependencies with Willemstad as capital. This colony became the Netherlands Antilles in 1952. The Dutch part of the SSS islands initially formed the single “island area” (Dutch: eilandgebied, the main administrative division of the Netherlands Antilles, governed by an Island council) the Leeward islands (Dutch: de Bovenwindse eilanden) until 1983.

SSS on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “HISS”:

Hiss is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

HISS on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “RATTLE”:

Joseph Fasano (born 1982) is an American poet. Fasano was raised in Goshen, New York, where he attended Goshen Central High School. He earned a BA in philosophy from Harvard University in 2005 and an MFA from Columbia University in 2008. His poem “Mahler in New York” won the 2008 RATTLE Poetry Prize. He has been a finalist for the Missouri Review Editors’ Prize and the Times Literary Supplement Poetry Competition, among other honors. He has taught at SUNY Purchase, Manhattanville College, and Columbia University.

Fasano’s poems have appeared in the Yale Review, the Southern Review, FIELD, Tin House, Boston Review, Measure, Passages North, the American Literary Review, and other publications.

In 2011, Fasano’s first book, Fugue for Other Hands, won the Cider Press Review Book Award. It was nominated for the Kate Tufts Poetry Award, and it has recently been nominated for the Poets’ Prize, “awarded annually for the best book of verse published by a living American poet two years prior to the award.” His second collection of poems, Inheritance, was released in May, 2014. In 2015, Fasano published Vincent, a book-length poem based very loosely on the 2008 killing of Tim McLean by Vince Li on a Greyhound Bus near Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, on the Trans Canada Highway.

RATTLE on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “SISS”:

Amerasia was a journal of Far Eastern affairs best known for the 1940s “Amerasia Affair” in which several of its staff and their contacts were suspected of espionage and charged with unauthorized possession of government documents.

In 1937 Amerasia was founded by Frederick Vanderbilt Field, who also chaired the editorial board, and Philip Jaffe, a naturalized American born in Russia. It was edited by Jaffe and Kate L. Mitchell. Field was the publication’s chief financial backer. Jaffe was a friend of Earl Browder, general secretary of the Communist Party of the United States. The journal’s staffers and writers included a number Communists or former Communists, including Chi Ch’ao-ting, and at one time Joseph Milton Bernstein, who has been alleged to be a Soviet agent. The journal had a small circulation and sold for fifteen cents a copy. It ceased publication in 1947.

Kenneth Wells, an analyst for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), noticed that an article printed in the January 26, 1945, issue of Amerasia was almost identical to a 1944 report he had written on Thailand. OSS agents investigated by breaking into the New York offices of Amerasia on March 11, 1945, where they found hundreds of classified documents from the Department of State, the Navy, and the OSS.

SISS on Wikipedia