Solving time: 37 minutes.
After yesterday’s nightmare, there was much relief chez McText this morning. Not sure that my parsing of 7ac and 18dn are correct but.
| Across
|
| 1 |
CHAIRPERSON. C (cape), HAIR (fur), PER (for each), SON (child). |
| 7 |
BOO. One def (Show disapproval) and three wordplays: BOOB, BOOK and BOOM minus their lasts. Or is there something I’m missing? |
| 9 |
SAND,PAPER. That would be Georges, aka Amantine (also Amandine) Lucile Aurore Dupin, later Baroness (French: baronne) Dudevant (Paris, 1 July 1804 – 8 June 1876) [Wik]. |
| 10 |
WOR(L)D. |
| 11 |
CAYENNE. Sounds like K/N, from K(itche)N. |
| 12 |
AMENITY. Anagram. |
| 13 |
INCAS. Almost IN CASE (packed). |
| 15 |
SI,MP,LET,ON. Reversal of IS, MP … usw. |
| 17 |
KINGS LYNN. I’m assuming this is Henry KINGSL{e}Y + NN. Or: it could be Charles. See Jack’s comment.
|
| 19 |
CORFU. C{elsius} OR F{ahrenheit}, U. |
| 20 |
Omitted. God of Thunder and Water. |
| 22 |
B(EW)ITCH. The old ‘entrance’ ploy again? |
| 24 |
A(PA)RT. Per annum = PA. |
| 25 |
H,AS(TINES)S. |
| 27 |
S,IT! |
| 28 |
EUROSCEPTIC. Anagram; and a darned good one. |
| Down
|
| 1 |
COS. You need to know your basic trig here. |
| 2 |
{j}AUNTY. |
| 3 |
REPINES. Reversal of SNIPER inc. E. |
| 4 |
EXPRESS,L,Y. |
| 5 |
S(Y)RIA. Reversal of AIRS. |
| 6 |
NEW DEAL. What you get after shuffling. |
| 7 |
BARRI(ST)ER. |
| 8 |
ODDLY ENOUGH. Anagram where the answer could be a clue for ONE HUG. |
| 11 |
CRICKET BATS. |
| 14 |
CONSONANT. U and I are vowels. |
| 16 |
M(I,NIB)USES. |
| 18 |
SPECTRE. Not sure how this works. I take it that if you cut RE-SPECT in two, you get SPECT-RE. The Great Vinyl has it: reSPECT REspect. A hidden inclusive by any other name.
|
| 19 |
COW,HIDE. |
| 21 |
USHER. The Fall of the House Thereof. |
| 23 |
OMITTED. It’s for complete twits. |
| 26 |
SIC. Initials. |
I believe ‘spectre’ is an implied hidden word in ‘respect respect’, which is two respects.
I got a bit stuck by carelessly putting ‘King’s Lyme’ instead of ‘King’s Lynn’, so it took a while to straighten that and get ‘minibuses’. I never really saw how ‘cayenne’ worked, was looking for some sort of percussion player.
I was thinking of Charles Kingsley (perhaps most famous for Water-babies) at 17ac. I too don’t fully understand 18dn.
I predict rumblings in Dorset area over the DBE at 27ac and I would share those misgivings.
I shall recycle tomorrow.
On numbers of clues, I think it’s high time we started giving our times on a per clue basis, to adjust for grid differences, maybe having first trimmed the outliers (i.e. the odd clue which takes inordinately longer than all the others, such as some SUBFUSC or other).
Once you have the grid on the screen, right-click on a blank area and select “print preview”. Then go to “shrink to fit” and select 90%. The bottom of the screen should say “Page 1 of 1”.
Then use the print icon at the left of the toolbar to print from within this window.
Unfortunately, this doesn’t give you an opportunity to print the grid in grey,
My point is that, whilst “instruction to boxer” is a DBE, so is “instruction to dog”, strictly speaking, but I don’t think anyone would object to it (I may be wrong here). Where you draw the line just depends how strict you want to be.
Personally I don’t have a problem with use of “boxer” here because it contributes to the surface and conceals the definition, which makes the DBE forgivable. The addition of “perhaps” would signal the definition rather glaringly and spoil the clue for me.
Enjoyable puzzle, with some innovative wordplay at 19ac (I hadn’t seen CORFU clued this way), 10 and 11. USHER from ‘escort’ only, until my post-solve cogitations drew ‘House of Usher’ up from the depths. COWHIDE was last in, mainly because I’d been looking for something meaning ‘put in fear’, such as ‘terrify’. Kingley’s didactic and at times dyspeptic Water Babies features one of literature’s most cumbersome characters, Mrs. Bedonebyasyoudid.
A breeze today by comparison with COD to the brilliant SPECTRE (thanks vinyl1) causing me to erase my complaints about that clue from my original comment. SIT is sweet and would have been spoiled by avoiding the DBE.
This isn’t meant to be a red rag to a Devon Ruby (closest I could get to Dorset) but I do think to describe this as a DBE is a genuine category error.
In this puzzle, you do have to figure out how each clue works.
Quite a lot bunged in from definition today, and several I didn’t understand even going back after solving. So thanks to mctext and vinyl1 for explaining BOO, KINGS LYNN, SPECTRE and USHER.
There was some quite neat stuff in here: the K and N device, C or F, COS/SIN, ODDLY ENOUGH… but COD to EUROSCEPTIC.
I don’t think 27 presents much of a problem. The pugilistic surface is fine, and you might as well say “sit” to a boxer as any other dog – it doesn’t need a for example. What might you say to a labrador?
Curiously, my 17 novelist was K Amis – is there any particular reason why (particularly unusual) first names can’t be used? If you google Kingsley novelist, his is the first on the list. Odd to have a clue where precise identity doesn’t matter.
CoD would go to SPECTRE if I had seen it – a brilliant and possibly even novel device.
I thought it a rather run of the mill affair with the spectre device probably the cleverest clue. Agree 28A is a good anagram but hardly difficult.
18dn is unusual. I don’t think I’ve come across an indirect/implied hidden word before (which it clearly is). 7ac suffers from the intrusion of ‘in’ (“reduced volume in short report”)following the earlier ‘of’). I think the setter’s strived too hard for the multiple wordplay.
A little easier, and considerably more enjoyable than yesterday’s offering. There were several clues I liked – ODDLY ENOUGH, CAYENNE, and SPECTRE all spring to mind, but there were others as well.
COD to Corfu.
Had a health scare with one of the kids earlier in the year and got out of the habit of posting on here. Things getting back to normal now though.
I’m trying to build up a head of steam for October’s visit to that London for the championships.