Happy 17th of December!
Throughout the month, to accompany the release of our book on the Mathematics of Christmas, Hannah Fry & I are tweeting out Christmathsy bits and pieces, one a day, advent calendar style. Assuming we don’t run out of ideas, that is…
The lyrics were created using the same Markov model used to generate the Queen’s tweets. How many of the nine Christmas songs can you identify?
Answers via the comments or on Twitter. All correct answers will be rewarded with deep respect and warm Christmas wishes. Enjoy!
CLICK HERE TO SEE THE WHOLE CALENDAR SO FAR
SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY’S PUZZLE
Scroll down for the solution…
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Solution:
Here’s our suggestion for the fourth picture:
Stephen Hawking: A wise man (3 of them)
Reindeer in “The Night Before Christmas” (8 of those*)
Alan Sugar doing the high jump: A lord-a-leaping (10 of those**)
3 × 8 + 10 = 34
So we need something Christmassy that is associated with the number 34. i.e. a street, as in the Oscar-winning 1947 Christmas film “Miracle on 34th Street” (and its many, less award-winning remakes):
Apologies to those outside the UK (or inside it, for that matter) who didn’t know who Lord Sugar was.
Genuine Christmas miracles.
* No Rudolph in the original poem, of course!
** There are, admittedly, different versions of the song, but a Google search suggests that “10 lords-a-leaping”, the number given in the most influential 1909 Austin version of the song, is at least eight times more popular than either of the other possibilities.
[ REDACTED FOR SPOILER REASONS – THIS ANSWER SCORED 7/9. WELL DONE. ]