Solving time: one left (7d) after an hour, so turned to aids for it. It’s not a word I’m familiar with, and I think the wordplay was sufficiently tricky to prevent me from getting it however long I’d stared at it.
I struggled to get going today, although this may have been a mixture of tiredness and bloggers nerves. A couple had to go in on faith because I wasn’t aware of the word (AMBLER & TRENCHERMAN). There were some good clues here, but the highlight was undoubtedly searching for YouTube clips to go with 11d.
Anyway, it’s late and it’s cold and I want my bed so let’s get on with it.
cd = cryptic def., dd = double def., rev = reversal, homophones are written in quotes, anagrams as (–)*, and removals like this
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | STAND OUT – not completely clear how this works. I think it’s ‘Persist’ = STAND + ‘in opposing’ = OUT. I filled it in from the checkers & definition. Or maybe it’s just a straightforward dd – see comments below. |
| 5 | RE(WIN)D |
| 9 | rev hidden word |
| 10 | CHINESE WALL = C |
| 12 | V |
| 13 |
|
| 15 | A(M |
| 16 | MEA |
| 18 | HIGH TEA = THIGH with the inital T ‘very delayed’, i.e. moved to the end + EA |
| 20 | REEFER = REF + E’ER all rev |
| 23 | dd – another one it unaccountably took me ages to see. |
| 24 | DISC (recording) + OUR AGE (the 21st century) |
| 26 | T(R)ENCH + |
| 27 | P |
| 28 | dd – Royal attendants are seen WITH E.R. |
| 29 | T(ERR)IERS |
| Down | |
| 1 | S + TROVE |
| 2 | ANTONYM = (NOT MANY)* – A very natural surface despite an awkward set of letters for an anagram. |
| 3 | DE(CATH)LETE |
| 4 | UNI + N(FORM)ATIVE |
| 6 |
|
| 7 | I + M (A) + MATE – This is the one that defeated me. I’d not heard of an IMAMATE before, although I was aware that an IMAM was a Moslem cleric, so maybe I should have got it. But MATE = couple was sufficiently obscure to prevent me from doing so. |
| 8 | DOLOMITE = DO + LO + (TIME)* – I didn’t know this was a rock, but I’m aware of the Dolomites as a European mountain range, so it was a small leap from there. |
| 11 | (REMEMBER A CO |
| 14 | PAGE + TURNER |
| 17 | C(HEP + ST)OW – Hep is an obsolete alternative for HIP, in the ‘fashionable’ sense. A Jersey is a breed of cow. |
| 19 | G(ARM)ENT |
| 21 | EXAM + P(L)E |
| 22 | R |
| 25 | deliberately omited |
Remember it because it also came up on Tuesday.
Surely ‘mate’ meaning ‘couple’ isn’t obscure in a verbal sense.
“To resist, persist in opposition or resistance, refuse to yield or comply, hold out. Const. against (an opponent, proposal, etc.), with (an opponent)”.
Don’t want to prolong the debate about 12, but I don’t have any problem with reading “it’s” as “it is” (I wish there was a more elegant way of saying that…).
There were no unknown words except PERK meaning to make coffee as I might have expected it to be spelt with a C. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen it written down before.
(I just looked it up in SOED which lists PERC as an alternative but obviously it has to be K here to fit the other part of the clue)
I’m with you on STICK OUT. Once I’d sorted that my last two were 28A and 29A.
I’m still not sure whether I like solving online compared to the paper version. I do feel more stressed, even though I have my phoen stopwatch running when solving in the newspaper.
Incidentally, I don’t know whether anyone else has looked at the new i newspaper from the Independent. It is only 20p and they have a prize cryptic crossword on a Friday. It was an iPad last week (I did not win) and a watch this week.
But for anyone with championship ambitions, that’s just the kind of practice you need.
I’ve only bought i once, on another day of the week, when it had the “5 clue cryptic crossword” – done in less than a minute so not tried again. The comp one sounds possibly worth a punt …
29A uses a device TIERS (people using ropes) which I saw recently in a Guardian puzzle by Araucaria; so my guess is that the good Reverend may be the setter today.
Am glad to say that all this new vocab I’m learning is being put to good use … in solving further crosswords! I’ll have to try and get CESS into conversation at some point…!
But that’s about it!
However I too had MORECOMBE making this the fourth failure to complete correctly this week. Certainly a record. Very annoying for a straightforward puzzle with, very unusually, only one unknown (AMBLER).
I wondered if there was a meaning for CHINESE WALL other than the one I’m familiar with, which is just a set of procedures. There isn’t really a “barrier” involved any more than there is a barrier preventing me from telling my kids that the tooth fairy doesn’t really exist. However I see that ODE uses the word “barrier” in the definition so I’ll shut up.
I was in the thick of working when Chinese Walls became an issue following a spate of mergers and acquisitions. In my experience they are a complete fiction with key information leaking verbally all over the odd bottle of wine in a City wine bar.
I’m sure many of the establishments are still there, but believe most trade is now in the evening rather than lunchtime. (City worker most of 1981-2000)
More to the point when half of one’s colleagues have been laid off one is less inclined to indulge in long boozy lunches. The restaurant and bar trade in the City has been hit very hard by the credit crunch.
Re 12 ac, no one seemed to have yet mentioned that old ladies’ travel standby, the “vanity case” (sorry, I can’t see how to put hyperlinks in these posts, but just google it and there are lots).
As axplained by Peter a couple of years ago:
“Use followed by the ‘name’ and . Apparently ‘a’ means ‘anchor’ and and ‘href’ = “hypertext reference”.
e.g.
Times for the Times blog
[When you put a URL in a comment, LiveJournal automatically makes it into a hyperlink – unless you choose the “Don’t auto-format” option as I have in this case to avoid the URL in my example becoming a link.]
If you use links, it’s well worth using the Preview option to check that they work as you intended. Use copy and paste from your browser’s “address bar” to get the URL – typing URLs by hand is a mug’s game.”
I’ve saved this meesage in word and just copy the URL I want into the bit between the tags and the add my own title.
Use the archive for 28 March 2008 and look for Peter’s post about 3/4 of the way down the comments
Sorry to be a pain when you’re trying so hard to be helpful!
<a href=”Web address”>Text for link</a>.
For instance
<a href=”http://www.bbc.co.uk/“>This is the BBC homepage</a>.
will appear like this
This is the BBC homepage.
If you can manage somehow to make it appear in plain, I’d be very glad to save it for future reference.
COD the very clever 24ac.
I also had a very difficult time with ‘imamate’ before seeing it, makes a nice change to claims of friendship.
At least I had heard of everything except for ‘Eric Morecambe’, although not very sure where Chepstow is located.
Oh, the puzzle was pretty good. Last in IMAMATE.
I thought with ER, our age and way to summon were very good devices.
By the way, the name I always associate with “Hep” is Slim Gaillard. Here he is with Chicken Rhythm, which, almost unbelievably, he managed to get past the BBC censors in the 1950s. Follow the link only if you’re not easily offended or are innocence personified, as those censors must have been.