ACROSS
1 JACKAL JACK (fellow in suit) A L (large) What a delightfully outrageous way of calling Jack a fellow in suit!
4 PRESS-UP Cha of PRE (before) S (second) SUP (drink)
9 ha deliberately omitted
10 IRON OXIDE Ins of ON OX (steer as in bovine) in I RIDE (travel) for what is commonly called RUST, which makes this almost an &lit
11 WOODEN LEG WOODEN (lacking expression) LEG (stage) Another splendid def, walk-on part indeed!
12 MAFIA Rev of AIFAM, ins of FA (Football Association or footballers) in AIM (goal)
13 RUFF Sounds like ROUGH (not even)
14 MONEY TALKS *(YET MAN’S OK Left) Ironic sounding clue
18 HEAVEN-SENT Ins of N (northern) in HEAVES (lifts) ENT (ear, nose and throat, hospital department)
20 WHEN The last letters of noW thougH onE caN
23 CANOE Ins of O (over) in CANE (stick)
24 SOBRIQUET SO (rev of OS, Ordinary Seaman or sailor) BRIQUET (brick-shaped block made of compressed coal dust, charcoal, etc) for a nickname; an assumed name.
25 JUXTAPOSE *(Jack Old US EXPAT)
26 QUITO capital of Ecuador. Thanks to paulmcl, sounds like key toe (crucial kick)
27 NUDGERS Ins of E (ecstasy) in *(New DRUGS)
28 BELIZE Ins of LIZ (familiar form of Elizabeth) in BEE (worker) (formerly British Honduras) a democratic constitutional monarchy, and the northernmost Central American nation. I love this setter’s description of Elizabeth Regina II as female leading us! Priceless!
DOWN for a
1 JOBSWORTH A minor official who regards the rigid enforcement of petty rules as more important than providing a service to the public. Thanks to paulmcl, J (judge) BOSWORTH (a battle ground) with letter B pushed to second
2 CRY WOLF Cha of CRY (keen as in lamentation) WOLF (bolt as in food)
3 AMULET Ins of MULE (slipper) in AT (rev of TA, cheers) Thanks to paulmcl of California for a charm worn to ward off evil
4 PRONG PRONE (lying) minus E + G (good)
5 ENORMITY *(mine Tory)
6 SKILFUL SKIPFUL (pile of building waste) with L substituted for P, the middle letter
7 PIETA PIE (shepherd’s pie, geddit?) TA (rev of AT) The Pietà is a subject in Christian art depicting the Virgin Mary cradling the dead body of Jesus, most often found in sculpture like the masterpiece of Renaissance sculpture by the renowned artist Michelangelo Buonarroti, housed in St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City.
8 ZILLIONS ZIL (rev of LIZ, an informal handle for Elizabeth) LIONS (common name for rugby team)
15 ENNOBLED ENNOB (rev of BONNET, hood minus T) LED (light-emitting diode) and what a cheeky def, got up to peer !
16 SUNSTROKE SUN (Sunday, regarded as first day of the week) STROKE (the leading member of a crew of 8 oarsmen)
17 BEVERAGE BE + AVERAGE (mean) minus first A
19 ANNEXED AN (indefinite article) + ins of X (symbol for times or multiplication in arithmetics) in NEED (poverty) Yet another fantastic def, did appropriate!
21 HOUDINI HOUR (time) minus R DIN (racket) I, the escape artist so audaciously defined as tie-break ace! Bravo!
22 RISQUE R (resistance) IS QUE (that in French, clued as coming from De Gaulle)
23 CAJUN CA (rev of AC, account or bill) JUN (June with 30 days) descendant of the French-speaking Acadians deported from Canada to Louisiana in 1755; often associated with settling in marshy places like the answer in 9 Across
24 SCOTS Rev of SeT fOr CaSt
Key to abbreviations
dd = double definition
dud = duplicate definition
tichy = tongue-in-cheek type
cd = cryptic definition
rev = reversed or reversal
ins = insertion
cha = charade
ha = hidden answer
*(fodder) = anagram
AMULET is “MULE” (slipper) in TA (cheers) up
JOBSWORTH is J (judge) and BOSWORTH with the B lowered (head down). Battle of Bosworth Field.
What a splendid puzzle. Over an hour I think for me. Took me ages to get BELIZE even with all the checkers
On arrival at the office I used a solver to unravel 14ac where I was (and still am) convinced there is something wrong with the clue. The absence of a capital letter on its first word suggests that another word is missing and there’s no definition (as far as I can see) so I assume one explains the other.
I’m not clear how 20 works either if the definition is “on all the time”.
Isn’t “coming from de Gaulle” a tautology?
I was surprised to read that so many people found yesterday’s puzzle difficult. I thought it was a stroll in the park compared to this.
At 20A I took the definition as “all the time”, which means “while”, which means WHEN. And they can be substituted in “I chew my pencil all the time I am solving”.
Perhaps someone can confirm how the clue to 14ac appears in the newspaper?
Brilliant puzzle though. Excellent clues, and a double pangram too. Difficult to choose a COD, but I did stop to admire JOBSWORTH at 1D despite the ticking clock..
Great stuff, with the exception of 6D which I thought was too easily readable Richard’s way. I went for SKILFUL on the grounds that SKIPFUL probably wasn’t in Collins or COD (true unless Collins have added it since 1991), but that’s the kind of knowledge I don’t think you should need to use.
To much for me and I guess many others who look but don’t contribute to this site? I am seriously thinking of joining you.
I also toyed with SKIPFUL, and I would have argued that was a proper answer if my Championship depended on it.
Was this perhaps one crossword where seeing the probable pangram was of help? For those (like me) who struggled with the frabjous BELIZE (and hence ZILLIONS) the absence otherwise of Z’s could have been a pointer.
Forget yesterday’s: surely this one has a real chance of CoY.
PS
Not sure I sent this properly first attempt
As well as the devilish clues I was slowed down by confidently putting in FELINE for 28ac. A cat is a familiar, it begins with F (female), that must be it, move on… This left me a problem for 8dn, which opened up the whole NE when I eventually saw the mistake.
In the paper 14ac appears like this:
…yet man’s OK left broke? (5,5)
Having checked online I see they missed off the dots, which certainly makes things less clear.
This was a real exercise in opening up little seams and chipping away at them until others began to emerge. There weren’t too many clues here I could have solved cold.
We’re being spoilt – two really fine crosswords on consecutive days. Seems ages since we had a pangram, let alone a double. Bravo the setter all round (apart from 6d!).
Spent an inordinate amount of time on this one, but was determined to complete at least half before giving up…so the top half it was (+ one or two others). However, even got some of those wrong (MILLIONS, SKIPFUL…). And didn’t really understand why some of the others were (IRON OXIDE, JOBSWORTH…).
Massive respect to all you guys who managed to finish it, note to self: ‘Must try harder…’. Honestly, after yesterday’s I really thought I was getting somewhere!
🙁
Louise
COD 22d.
A lot I wanted to pull the trigger on way too early (like JILLIONS), getting BELIZE as one of the first few in the second session really helped