Solving time: About 48 mins with 1 mistake.
Many thanks, first of all, to PB for letting me have an advance copy of this puzzle so I didn’t have to spend too much of my Christmas Day blogging.
I thought we might see something of a festive nature today, but apparently not. This seems a pretty standard Tim Moorey offering. The clues seem to be generally of a good standard as you would expect. My one mistake was in 3d.
cd = cryptic def., dd = double def., rev = reversal, homophones are written in quotes, anagrams as (–)*, and removals like this
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | VITUPERATE = (ITV REPEAT)* about U |
| 6 | S(L)OW – One of my last in. I was expecting a homophone and failed to look past that possibility. |
| 9 |
|
| 10 | SWISS ROLL – cd |
| 12 | NORFOLK BROADS = (LOOK FOR + S + BRAND)* – although the anagrist was awkward to pick out, so I had to reverse engineer it. |
| 14 | STOPOVER = OVER after POTS rev |
| 15 | HOOD + O/O |
| 17 | CAD(D + I)S |
| 19 | DANSEUSE = (SUDANESE)* |
| 21 | ONE-NIGHT STAND = (SNOG AND THEN IT)* – lovely anagram. The first part would probably have worked on its own as an &lit. |
| 24 | A + D + MISSION |
| 25 | TURBO |
| 26 | HART = “HEART” – Lorenz Hart was best known for his collaboration with Richard Rodgers which produced many classic songs like Blue Moon and The Lady is a Tramp. |
| 27 | MYSTERIOUS = (ITEM’S YOURS)* |
| Down | |
| 1 | VEAL – hidden in |
| 2 | TORONTO = ONTO (aware of) after TOR |
| 3 | POWER POLITICS – cd – Not being familiar with the phrase, I went for POWER POLICIES, but I probably should have got it. |
| 4 | RE + STORE + R |
| 5 |
|
| 7 | LEONARD = (ONE)* in LARD – My last in. It took me an age to work out the wordplay here. Very well disguised & my COD. |
| 8 | WELL-SPOKEN = PEN (writer) about OK (in order) after WELLS (cathedral city) |
| 11 | SERIOUS MATTER = (MORTUARIES SET)* |
| 13 | PSYCHO + PATH |
| 16 | MASSENET = (TAMENESS)* |
| 18 | DREAMER = RE in (ARMED)* |
| 20 | UNDERGO – hidden in |
| 22 | HAIRY = (RIYA |
| 23 | OOPS = |
I’m also not totally convinced by 5dn.
At 9ac ‘igh is needed to indicate the dropped H and I assume is also a reference to Harrow School being located on a hill which may not be too well-known – to rival public schools it’s known as “the dump on the lump”, I believe.
I wondered about S=sun in 12ac and on checking it’s not in COED or Collins, but Chambers has it.
Well done Dave, your third blog in three days! And thanks to all at the ST for giving us a puzzle today.
Thank you for the blog and ST for the crossword.
I don’t know what it is about Canuck cities, but that’s two I’ve messed up, having had ‘Ottowa’ earlier in the year.
A Merry Christmas to one and all, and thanks to PB and Dave.
Definition of HICK
: an unsophisticated provincial person
American usage. From Merriam Webster online.
The question is about 11dn (SERIOUS MATTER). We all say this and many, many more such things; but they don’t occur in dictionaries. So are they cricket?
SERIOUS MATTER has 6m hits on Google when searched as “exact phrase” which doesn’t seem an awful lot to me but probably justifies its inclusion assuming there are no other better grounds.
Edited at 2011-12-26 08:21 am (UTC)
When I go to add comments now the box comes up marked “anon” despite my being logged into LJ and my name logged in is showing at the top of the page. Maddening. I had to log in separately to post this under my user name.
Re 5dn: not sure I see the problem here? The parsing is T = “term for unintelligent,” ie its last letter, + HICK = bumpkin. The definition is the whole, ie it is an &lit. “Thick” would seem to be a correct term for an unintelligent bumpkin. The COD, perhaps?
I too was slowed by putting power struggle for 3dn, but nevertheless didn’t find this hard.. unlike Saturdays, which took me forever to complete