It’s been 4 days since posting last, and so after perusing additions to Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2025 site since then, these three caught my eye:
- Pankaj Dheer (9 November 1956 – 15 October 2025)
- Rustam Urmanovich Akhmedov (10 November 1943 – 12 October 2025)
- Dobromir Georgiev Zhechev (12 November 1942 – 12 October 2025)
Obituary of John March Jr.: Born on November 11, 1948 in Middleton, Annapolis Co., NS— Died on March 31, 1981 in Wilmot, Annapolis Co., NS
- Saleh al-Jafarawi (22 November 1997 – 12 October 2025)
- Zoë Charlotte Wicomb (23 November 1948 – 13 October 2025)
- Tony Fitzpatrick (November 24, 1958 – October 11, 2025)
- Michael Kenneth Pratt (13 November 1954 – 11 October 2025)
- Kęstutis Šapka (15 November 1949 – 11 October 2025)
- Thomas Frederick Hansen (November 8, 1946 – October 11, 2025)
- Sarwar Jahan Nizam (2 November 1952 – 10 October 2025)
- Terry "Buzzy" Johnson (November 12, 1938 – October 8, 2025)
- Wolfgang Fiedler (20 November 1951 – 8 October 2025)
- Lubomír Hrstka (28 November 1946 – 8 October 2025)
- Denis "Dinny" Lowry (30 November 1934 – 8 October 2025)
- Halid Bešlić (20 November 1953 – 7 October 2025)
- Natana Kasinathan (1 November 1940 – 6 October 2025)
- Gerald Adrian Ouellette (November 1, 1938 – October 6, 2025)
- Orfeo Reda (9 November 1932 – 5 October 2025)
- Ann B. Walker (November 1, 1923 – October 5, 2025)
- Vladimir Nikolayevich Laptev (26 November 1945 – 4 October 2025)
- Miroslav Kráľ (2 November 1947 – c. 2 October 2025)
- Judit Elek (10 November 1937 – 1 October 2025)
“November 1(x3), 2(x2),__, …, __, 8, 9(x2), 10(x2), 11, 12(x2), 13, __, 15, __, …,__, 20(x2), __, 22, 23(x2), 24, __, 26, __, 28, __, 30/Date Sequence” pattern cluster.
There’s always one of more names that stands out in terms of providing us with a cryptic communication, and in this case the one that stands out the most is, “Denis Lowry”, given the cryptic “den is low/lower lorry”. Note the etymology:
lorry(n.) "a truck; a long wagon with a flat bed and four wheels," 1838, British railroad word, probably from verb lurry "to pull, tug" (1570s), which is of uncertain origin.
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