Solving time 20 minutes
Average to easyish puzzle with no obscure words, only one very old author and an engineer to provide balance. A little care is needed at 20D to enter the definition and not the cryptic homophone.
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | CHITCHAT – C(HITCH)AT; rabbit (slang) =idle talk as in 12A; |
| 5 | OTTAWA – A-WATT-O all reversed; James Watt, influential engineer; Canadian capital city; |
| 9 | INITIATE – IN-IT-I-ATE; another 12A perhaps; |
| 10 | INSTEP – a trained army on the march is IN STEP except when crossing a bridge; Wellington=boot; |
| 12 | TWEET – T-WEE-T; modern mindless malarky; |
| 13 | DIRECTORS – two meanings, the second a reference to film directors; |
| 14 | LEADING,LIGHT – READING,RIGHT and change R to L; Jack Dorsey perhaps; |
| 18 | ANNOUNCEMENT – A-N-NOUN-CEMENT; more 12A; |
| 21 | BATTALION – BAT-TA-LION; colonel’s command; |
| 23 | ALIVE – A-LI(V)E; I tweet therefore I am; |
| 24 | DROWSY – Y-SWORD all reversed; sleepy after all that tweeting; |
| 25 | WHATNOTS – (hasn’t two)*; Victorian shelves for holding ornaments; usually hyphenated?; |
| 26 | SHERPA – S(HER)PA; Tenzing Norgay no doubt; |
| 27 | SPURIOUS – SPUR(IOU)S; SPURS=Tottenham Hotspur, enigmatic football club, subject of many a 12A; |
| Down | |
| 1 | CHINTZ – C-H-I-N-T-Z are in alphabetical order; weak clue; |
| 2 | IRISES – I-RISES; another 12A produced by 4D; |
| 3 | COINTREAU – (a neurotic)*; delicious orange liqueur taken with ice sitting on a balcony by the Med; |
| 4 | AUTODIDACTIC – someone who is self taught is in a class of one – most tweeters when it comes to grammar, spelling, etc; |
| 6 | TUNIC – TUNI(s)-C=Cape; |
| 7 | ALTHOUGH – A-L-THOUGH(t); |
| 8 | APPOSITE – A-P-PO-SITE; |
| 11 | BRINKMANSHIP – B-RINKMANSHIP; the artistry of John Curry perhaps; Cold War strategy devised by John Foster Dulles; |
| 15 | LANCASTER – (ancestral)*; Kings Henry IV, V and VI descended from John of Gaunt; |
| 16 | BARBADOS – BARB(ADO)S; nasty tweets=BARBS; |
| 17 | KNOTHOLE – deal is a type of wood; sounds like “not whole”; |
| 19 | KIMONO – KI(MO)N-O; |
| 20 | VERSUS – sounds like “verses”; “recital” is homophone indicator; |
| 22 | AESOP – SEA reversed-OP; man of fables, born too early to tweet; |
24ac reminded me of Godfrey in Dad’s Army.
I believe this present exercise is known as blogging. If I reduce my entry to 140 characters (perish the thought) would it become tweeting?
Edited at 2012-08-21 08:35 am (UTC)
Knightsbridge – compound nouns like catchphrase, sightscreen, watchstrap and bergschrund all have six consecutive consonants too
Sequoia – one of several short words containing all five vowels once only
Beefily, billowy and dikkops (South African bird) – a few words with all letters in alphabetical order
Edited at 2012-08-21 05:15 pm (UTC)
Last in KNOTHOLE – wanted to lengthen APROPOS at 8dn. A tad uninspiring today compared to the very high standards we come to expect.
The NW corner held me up longest until I’d had a good think about the middle “problem” part of 1A and thought from checkers it might be “itch” then “hitch” and then the answer came to me.
In my Cheshire accent, Verses and Versus sound identical – but I made a mistake here momentarily by putting in Averse until realising that 23 was unlikely to be ????V.
LOI Knothole.
Generally a very good and straightforward puzzle but I didn’t like the homophone or the feeble clue at 1dn which goes in the same category as assembling words from points of the compass or the musical scale, simply lazy setting.
Edited at 2012-08-21 08:54 am (UTC)
Edited at 2012-08-21 11:41 am (UTC)
Otherwise, really enjoyable. I love BRINKMANSHIP. Great word, fun clue. Nods to CHITCHAT and KNOTHOLE, too. Thanks, setter.
And thanks, jimbo, for the mention of John Curry. You prompted me to head to Wiki where I was shocked to learn he had died in the 90s aged just 44. That’s terribly sad. He was extraordinary.
ABHORS
ACKNOW
ALMOST
BEGILT
BEGINS
BEGIRT
BEKNOT
BIJOUX
BIOPSY
CHIMPS
CHINOS – qualifies as ‘materials’ which is close.
CHINTZ
DEHORT
DIMPSY
GHOSTY
I doubt you’ll find a dictionary which has all of these in, but they all exist somewhere!
=IF(AND(CODE(A1)<CODE(MID(A1,2,1)),CODE(MID(A1,2,1))<CODE(MID(A1,3,1)),CODE(MID(A1,3,1))<CODE(MID(A1,4,1)),CODE(MID(A1,4,1))<CODE(MID(A1,5,1)),CODE(MID(A1,5,1))<CODE(RIGHT(A1,1))),1,0)
Then filtered out the rows with a zero.
=OR(LEFT(A1)>MID(A1,2,1),MID(A1,2,1)>MID(A
and filter for all the FALSE values
not that this is an Excel forum, of course (but I’m all for brevity – I would have given CoD for “Material in order” at 1d)
on another theme – anyone would think Jimbo had something against Tweeting!
I had all correct within the hour except for my LOI, the alternative ANTIDIDACTIC
JB
Edited at 2012-08-21 05:02 pm (UTC)
Speaking of chintz, a friend of mine can immediately put the letters of any word you give him into alphabetical order (and I mean instantaneously recite them back to you), not to mention count them to boot. He was a great asset in solving anagram clues. When asked how he had acquired this unfortunately unmarketable skill, he replied he had to do something to amuse himself when fielding at cricket.
No objection to CHINTZ, which went straight in without any checked letters – as I expect it did for anyone who’s read the chapter on “filters” in Kernighan and Pike’s The UNIX Programming Environment which gives an example of how to extract words of six or more letters, with letters in alphabetical order, from /usr/dict/web2. At the time it was written (my copy is dated 1984) this yielded
They kindly provide the information that egilops is a disease that attacks wheat. Readers are presumably supposed to know the meaning of the others!
JB
I see that the OED has it as an abscess or ulcer of the eye (or a lachrimal fistula), a Mediterranean oak (Quercus macrolepis), a cornfield weed, and any grass of the southern European genus Aegilops (or the genus itself). No mention of it as “a disease that attacks wheat”, though.