11:17 on the Club timer. Given that I spent at least two (inexplicable in hindsight) of those minutes trying to work out why 13 across was what it was, I think we can class this as very much on the straightforward side of things. Being easy, of course, doesn’t have to equate with inelegant, and this had lots of good surfaces.
| Across |
| 1 |
TOSH – (HOST)*. |
| 3 |
CRABBINESS – Circa RABBI + NESS. |
| 9 |
AGROUND – A + GROUND. |
| 11 |
REVISIT – REVerend I + SIT. |
| 12 |
HUNDREDTH – nice bit of Roman arithmetic: I + XI = XII (12), which is one hundredth of MCC (1200). |
| 13 |
SHONE – SH (=call for peace) + ONE (=I). |
| 14 |
SELF PORTRAIT – cryptic def. |
| 18 |
HEDGE SPARROW – [EDGES + Piano] in HARROW. |
| 21 |
LOOSE – 0 in LOSE. Ah, if only more people on the internet were aware of the distinction between ‘lose’ and ‘loose’… |
| 22 |
TACTICIAN – TACT + [CIA in IN]. |
| 24 |
SUMATRA – MA in SUTRA. even those with limited grasp of Sanskrit, or Indian religions, will presumably have heard of the most famous sutra. |
| 25 |
BEEHIVE – BEE (=”meeting to work”, as in, say, a quilting bee – probably more readily grasped by N American solvers) + Hard + I’VE, which gives a place of being busy, rather than commerce. |
| 26 |
AUTODIDACT – AUTO + “DID ACT”. |
| 27 |
RELY – River + ELY. When I started doing crosswords as a boy, I was unaware even of the existence of Ely, but soon realised how large it looms in the cryptic world. I’ve still never been there, so can’t be sure, but the map suggests the cathedral is close enough to the river for this to be an &lit. as well. |
| |
| Down |
| 1 |
TEA CHEST – TEACHES + Time; gunpowder tea is another crossword staple. |
| 2 |
STRANGLE – Line in STRANGE. |
| 4 |
REDID – RED I’D. |
| 5 |
BAR CHARTS – CHAR in BART’S (formerly St Bartholomew’s, and latterly part of a new-fangled NHS Trust). |
| 6 |
INVESTIGATIVE – VESTIGe in [1 NATIVE]. |
| 7 |
EUSTON – U.S. in ETON gives the first London inter-city terminus. And we have Eton to match Harrow from 18 across. |
| 8 |
SITTER – double def. |
| 10 |
UNREPRESENTED – UN + REPertory + RESENTED. |
| 15 |
RIGHT HAND – (HARD THING)*. |
| 16 |
ARTIFICE – heART + IF ICE. |
| 17 |
SWANNERY – (NEW YARNS)* playing on the dual meaning of “pen” as the female of the species. |
| 19 |
ALASKA – ASK in A Large Area. |
| 20 |
COMMIT – COMMIE + Tory. |
| 23 |
CUBIC – [Bishop + I] in ChUrCh, the bones in question being dice, which are so called in slang because they were originally made of actual bone. |
Thanks for the blog, topicaltim, and in particular for the full explanation of the wordplay in BEEHIVE and CUBIC. COD: HUNDREDTH (which I did manage to parse fully).
Only other query: isn’t the ‘initial’ in 16dn unnecessary?
As per keriothe’s comment, the latter can, of course, be seen as positively misleading (I also started by thinking that must be what provided the E in EUSTON) whereas “initially” in this one is at least help rather than hindrance, even if it’s not needed.
Thought EUSTON was a bit weak but RELY, though simple, was perfection.
25ac BEEHIVE puzzled me for the reason predicted by Tim. Neither “bee” for “meeting” nor BEEHIVE for “place of business” are common usages in the UK at least. The concept of a “spelling bee” was familiar enough but if you’d asked me I’d have said “bee” meant “competition”. It doesn’t though, and Collins also has “a place where busy people are assembled” so there it is.
I almost slowed myself down by putting in INVESTIGATION for 6dn, but fortunately thought to check it when 25ac proved difficult. And I didn’t understand 7dn EUSTON until after solving, puzzling for ages over how TON could mean “college”!
The ones that really stumped me were 12ac and 23dn. In the latter the wordplay was clear enough but if I’ve heard “bones” for “dice” before I forgot it long ago. And the Roman arithmetic went straight over my head so thanks for that.
These days it sometimes seems more people spell “lose” as “loose” than not, and I can assure you it’s not confined to the internet.
Thanks topicaltim for explaining hundredth and beehive – got those from defs and checkers.
Just down the coast from us is the remarkable Abbotsbury Swannery, well worth a visit if you’re ever in Dorset
23dn had to be CUBIC but I couldn’t see why. There is a “cuboid” bone in the foot which I assumed was what the setter had in mind before reading the explanation here which I’m not too happy with as this is a sort of defintion by example – a slang word for something that happens to be cubic – and there’s no indication, so I cry foul!
In many cases the cryptic was not needed. An intuitive solver could have jumped to the end, provided his guess was ‘investigative’.
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