Welcome from Tasmania, where the wife and I have wended our way after a couple of days watching the tennis in Rod Laver Arena. This was a pretty regular offering for a Monday, I thought, with a couple of words that we have seen recently popping up again, and nothing too tricky in the wordplay department.
20:32 for me. How did you go?
| ACROSS | |
| 1 | Small dose maybe overwhelming male player (5) |
| THESP – HE (male) in TSP (teaspoon – used in recipes) | |
| 4 | Spiritual being to evolve in a couple of ways? (9) |
| ARCHANGEL – CHANGE (evolve) in A RL (right and left – couple of ways) | |
| 9 | A brief walk with a live navigational device (9) |
| ASTROLABE – A STROL[l] A BE (live – verb) | |
| 10 | Half-heartedly make for island (5) |
| CRETE – CRE[a]TE (CREATE with one [half] of its medial letters deleted) | |
| 11 | Cross king with nothing on sandwiches (6) |
| NARKED – R (king) in (sandwiched by) NAKED (nothing on) | |
| 12 | A bug to move slowly if necessary (2,1,5) |
| AT A PINCH – A TAP (bug – think Watergate) INCH (move slowly) | |
| 14 | Friend initially meets composer outside European resort (4,5) |
| PALM BEACH – PAL (friend) M (first letter of meets) E (European) in BACH (Johann Sibelius or any of his myriad sons) | |
| 16 | Calm bit of music on the radio (5) |
| PEACE – sounds like piece | |
| 17 | Thanks charity, say, for steps taken in Latin America? (5) |
| TANGO – TA NGO | |
| 19 | Heft of punishments accepted by workers, possibly? (9) |
| BEEFINESS -FINES in BEES | |
| 21 | Book written backwards by one fool combined symbols (8) |
| EMOTICON – TOME reversed I CON (fool) | |
| 22 | Gentleman I ditched for a fuddy-duddy (6) |
| SQUARE – SQUIRE with the I replaced by an A | |
| 25 | Pinot Noir seen regularly near a region of Greece (5) |
| IONIA – [p]I[n]O[t] N[o]I[r] A | |
| 26 | Wrong meal cooked — tongue! (3,6) |
| LOW GERMAN – anagram* of WRONG MEAL | |
| 27 | Duly hire new housing minister, ultimately in a rush (9) |
| HURRIEDLY – R (final letter of minister) in DULY HIRE* | |
| 28 | User doesn’t open skin care product (5) |
| TONER – [s]TONER; STONER is not a word I’m familiar with for an addict/habitual user, but I have lived a sheltered life | |
| DOWN | |
| 1 | Coaches author, one quiet and nerdy (15) |
| TRAINSPOTTERISH – TRAINS (coaches) POTTER (e.g. Beatrix, Dennis) I SH | |
| 2 | Chemical to decay with lid taken off (5) |
| ESTER – [f]ESTER; ‘For sweetest things turn sourest by their deeds; Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds’ (Shakespeare, Sonnet 94) | |
| 3 | Saw dog held by lead (7) |
| PROVERB – ROVER in PB | |
| 4 | Greek warrior with a javelin’s tip and short weapon (4) |
| AJAX – A J (initial letter of javelin) AX[e] (singular British axes have an E) | |
| 5 | Handy guide teaches the cooks (5,5) |
| CHEAT SHEET – TEACHES THE* | |
| 6 | Drink cola mixed by old man (7) |
| ALCOPOP – COLA* POP | |
| 7 | Fruit grower’s head to hire once again (9) |
| GREENGAGE – G (initial letter of grower) REENGAGE | |
| 8 | One from a small place in Leicester then relocated (15) |
| LIECHTENSTEINER – IN LEICESTER THEN* | |
| 13 | Confused deer mostly ran very slowly around lake (10) |
| BAMBOOZLED – BAMB[i] L (lake) in OOZED (ran very slowly) | |
| 15 | One with property left over an unhappy experience (9) |
| LANDOWNER – L AN DOWNER | |
| 18 | Nice friend supporting one in organisation that’s folding? (7) |
| ORIGAMI – AMI (friend in French) after I (one) in ORG (organisation) | |
| 20 | Study one knight before a suitable activity? (7) |
| INQUEST – I (one) N (knight in chess) QUEST (suitable activity for a knight) | |
| 23 | Organisation essential for badminton (5) |
| ADMIN – hidden in [b]ADMIN[ton] | |
| 24 | Note means “not at home” (4) |
| AWAY – A (musical note) WAY (means) | |
I noticed it would likely be a pangram, as it indeed was, but it didn’t help to complete the puzzle. It rarely does.
FOI TRAINSPOTTERISH, which was useful for an abundance of starters. EMOTICON I’d have thought would be a singular symbol, but I see it is formed by a combination of keys. I toyed with EMOJISMS before discarding them.
19:31
26 minutes. Not too difficult though I had no idea about how TONER worked either. I did find spotting the likely pangram (yes, it is a rather 1d activity) useful in the SE corner for INQUEST and then SQUARE. We had IONIA in the QC last Wednesday when it was clued as ‘ancient part of Asia’, for Western Anatolia in Turkey. As was noted in the discussion on the blog, the Ionian Islands are part of Greece, so quite confusing.
That JS Bach certainly left a wonderful musical legacy. As well as being the father of several sons who were prolific composers, it seems he may have been the great-great-great or whatever grandfather of a certain Finnish composer.
Thanks to ulaca – hope you’re enjoying your time in Tassie – and setter
There used to be a joke about Bach, all his children, and his organ having no stops.
I agonised over CRETE. When we’ve seen it before, “half-heartedly” has reduced a repeated double letter to just one: eg MEET -> MET.
Agreed, I can’t recall seeing this device used to mean ‘delete either of the middle letters’.
I can’t recall any examples, of course, but my feeling is that we’ve had such clues before; I certainly wasn’t surprised by this one. And I can’t see any reason why the ‘heart’ should be a double letter.
Surely the heart of CREATE is EA?
And half of the heart is….?
I was mostly on the wavelength, but for a couple I was totally at sea. The ones I struggled with: archangel, narked, hurriedly, greengage, Liechtensteiner, and the diabolical bamboozled. I was stuck on that one for at least 15 minutes, going through every species of deer and antelope I could think of, until I said oh #@&*, it’s Bambi!
Not sure of my time, but I was listening to the Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique while solving, and there were only about three minutes left in the last movement, so definitely not good.
As I have noted elsewhere, today has not been my best of days for crosswords. I solved all of this apart from four clues in 30 minutes but after another 10 minutes I hadn’t made any further progress so I resorted to aids. And even after that I needed to reveal the answer at 1ac because Chambers Word Wizard didn’t find it. I imagine most solvers started as I did by thinking ‘M’ for ‘male’ in this clue. I eventually moved on to the possibility of ‘HE’ which with checkers would have given me ‘THE?P’ but it still didn’t prompt me to come up with THESP as I was thinking in terms of musicians and players of sport.
The others that stumped me were the intersecting SQUARE and INQUEST, the second of which I was unable to parse fully because I hadn’t spotted that ‘suitable activity’ referred back to ‘knight’. The T of QUEST confirmed my earlier suspicion that 19ac was TONER but although I considered that ‘user’ might refer to drugs I was unable to parse this as I have never heard of ‘stoner’.
I had no doubts about TANGO being correct but I didn’t understand NGO = charity. Now that I have established this stands for ‘Non-Governmental Organisation’ I realise ‘charity’ is only an example as indicated by ‘say’ in the clue, as many of them are not charities as such. It’s an abbreviation that doesn’t get quite as much usage these days as the associated QUANGO in which QUA can stand for ‘Quasi-autonomous’.
SQUARE/INQUEST were the source of my DNF. I had trouble thinking of any way to read the clues, beyond trying INSPECT at one point. I tried an alphabet trawl on the down clue, and, typically for me, overlooked Q.
THESP was my FOI; saw TSP for ‘small dose’, and HE followed; M never came to mind.
For me, STONER–not that I ever used the word–is (was) someone who smoked marijuana a lot; it has a rather archaic, 60s feel to it. But then so does smoking marijuana.
I hardly ever smoke marijuana now!
Strictly only vape. Unless I let the flowers get too hot under the ceramic filter.
But I can assure you, from my daily perambulations all across Brooklyn Heights, that smoking marijuana is hardly redolent of a bygone age.
Walking around almost anywhere in London will confirm the same!
NGO tends to be used for international organisations, whereas QUANGO is strictly UK.
I, too, got TONER long before INQUEST, but didn’t put it in for similar reasons. I knew stoner, but thought it rather a poor clue. As for INQUEST, I got it only after SQUARE, and even then I didn’t understand it, assuming it to imply that you would wear a suit to an inquest.
I slowed down in the SE and finally finished with… of all things… (-s)TONER!
Though (if not because…? Ha) I am a confirmed “user” in that sense (I hadn’t checked the anagrist so had LIECHTENSTEINAN before I did).
I’ve never seen THESP in the wild.
Seemed there should be an indication that ADMIN is itself an abbreviation, and not just part of “badminton.”
I think that in the UK, ADMIN is a word now.
I see that Collins has it as “informal short,” which isn’t strictly an abbreviation. Not surprising.
For what it’s worth, ODE has “[mass noun] (informal), chiefly (Brit.) the administration of a business, organization, etc.” “–origin 1940s: abbreviation.”
In education circles where I worked, sections of staff were ‘academic’ or ‘admin’.
Well THESP is an abbreviation that wasn’t indicated. I was quite surprised to find it with its own entry in the SOED.
I hate to say it but I did a little search and found it was in the wordplay for a clue in this crossword you blogged in November and wasn’t indicated as an abbreviation there.
No surprise. I’ve written a lot of stuff here! Actually the point I had in mind today wasn’t so much the abbreviation was not indicated but rather that Guy hadn’t queried it whilst he did query ADMIN which I’d have thought was used very widely.
I had a really stupid error. I saw how SQUARE worked, with the A substituting for I, and then went and typed SQUIRE anyway (which doesn’t even fit since it knocked out an A checker in ADMIN which I already had filled in). It’s the kind of error I would never make on paper, of course, since you don’t bother to fill in the letters that are already filled in. I was surprised TRAINSPOTTERISH was a word, but I realized immediately it would start as it did, and the wordplay gave ISH clearly.
DNF in just over 20 mins. Defeated by THESP.
COD: Proverb.
O Peace! and dost thou with thy presence bless
The dwellings of this war-surrounded Isle;
30 mins mid-brekker with last two Inquest/toner without understanding either.
I like half-heartedly to be doubles. I don’t like Thesp and Admin.
Thanks setter and U.
31 minutes with LOI and COD BAMBOOZLED. I still resent TRAINSPOTTERISH. Such activity was hip for ten year old boys in the days of steam, or at least I thought so. I entered TONER in faintly, not totally convinced of the skin product or the drug user, neither my areas of competence. That wasn’t what Ian Allen meant by trainspotting. I use ADMIN as a word frequently enough now, and not always pejoratively. A good puzzle. Thank you U and setter.
I still pop into Ian Allen’s bookshop in Waterloo for a mooch when I’m in London. A veritable treasure trove.
I’ve still got my Ian Allen books from when I was a youngster. Buses and trains. I was not trainspotterish – I was full-blown anorak in those days. Better than being a stoner, I suppose.
17′ 10″, could have been quicker, held up by convincing myself that the Greek warrior began with J. Also LEICHTENSTEINER needed all the crossers.
Didn’t parse THESP.
In the UK one routinely refers to ‘admin’ staff.
Thanks ulaca and setter.
FWIW, I was another Leichtensteiner… the I ending had me wanting to write in CAPRI at 10 ac. CRETE was LOI.
14:08. I spelt LIECHENSTEINER with an EI to start with which held me up on CRETE. LOI TONER when I eventually deduced STONER was a word for user. I liked PROVERB and GREENGAGE. Thanks Ulaca and setter.
6:55 but with a very stupid typo. I would have been quicker without a carelessly biffed INSPECT.
No problem with THESP or ADMIN: I wouldn’t really call them abbreviations. An abbreviation arguably ceases to be such when people use it regularly in speech. Typo is another example!
About 26 minutes, with the most time spent on the NW corner. Like others, I took a long time to move away from male=M in order to get THESP, and only then did ESTER and NARKED fall into place. I also hadn’t heard of ASTROLABE, though the wordplay was helpful.
A nice puzzle to start the week. Thanks setter and blogger.
FOI Trainspotterish
LOI Narked
COD Liechtensteiner
10:20
I was sent over 10′ by the SQUARE / INQUEST pair. Had I spotted that a pangram was on the cards I dare say I’d have got them much sooner. I was also a little confused by IONIA changing continents over the weekend, as note above.
FOI was ASTROLABE and I think I only know the word from crosswords.
Nice crossword (they’re always nice when you finish them in under 30 minutes, as I just did). No problems, just regular solutions. Have just understood the remark in the blog about J.S. Bach and a certain Finnish composer. Victor Borge asks for names of composers: “Bach”, “Which one, Johann Sebastian or Offen?”
I am pretty familiar with composers, but don’t understand the thing about Bach and a Finnish composer. Am I being thick? The two most well-known are Sibelius and Rautavaara – I assume it doesn’t apply to either…
By accident or design, at 14ac our esteemed blogger refers to Johann Sibelius Bach ..
Sorry for the late reply. You sound as though you know much more about music than I do so I’m probably teaching you how to suck eggs, but what about Bernhard Crusell? Here’s his “Introductions and Variations on a Swedish Song for Clarinet and Orchestra” if you’re interested or haven’t heard it before.
Thanks. Very nice. Hadn’t heard it before.
I don’t think I’ve heard that particular piece before, BR, but it’s lovely. I knew Crusell was a keen composer of clarinet music and to be fair, I’d assumed he was Swedish, but I see now that he was born in Finland, and considered himself a Finn although he lived most of his life in Sweden and spoke Swedish, as indeed did Sibelius, who had no Finnish. I completely missed the reference to Johann Sibelius in the blog, so didn’t get the joke!
43:16. Felt like a standard Monday but like so many I got very stuck on the SE corner. Biffing INSPECT didn’t help, and several times I thought “does it have something to do with esquire?”.
Next time I see a Z in a puzzle I’ll need to turn my pangram radar on. Thanks ulaca and setter.
After 30 minutes I was left with INQUEST and SQUARE unsolved, and I wasn’t sure of TONER. After another fruitless 10 minutes trying various possibilities for 20d I gave up and resorted to aids. THESP was no problem once I realized ‘male’ was not M.
I can’t think of many words as ugly as TRAINSPOTTERISH.
22:03
Comfortable romp to start the week. FOI THESP.
TRAINSPOTTERISH certainly helped to open things up quickly and entering CRETE before LIECHSTENSTEINER kept the spelling in order – i before e, then e before i.
Bit of a guess for ESTER and wasn’t sure about TONER until filling in SQUARE and INQUEST at which point I understood.
LOI BAMBOOZLED (after a few minutes thought)
24:20. Mondayish with a few head-scratching moments. Nice to see Potter clued as someone other than a wizard.
I got stuck in the SE corner with INQUEST, TONER and SQUARE unsolved, so looked up synonyms for gentleman, which gave me SQUIRE, SQUARE and the other two then dropped into place. I’d previously considered TONER, but having NHO STONER, couldn’t parse it. I then had 13d left as LOI. It totally BAMBOOZLED me for ages. I eventually saw oozed and Bamb(i). Doh! 35:05 with a 5d. Thanks setter and U.
21:36
An easy enough amble through this, with a slight pause in the South East where I tried to make INSPECT fit.
I always thought TONER was used in photocopiers. I suppose Goths could use it for eye-makeup.
STONER is a very fine novel by John Williams. There is no mention of any drug-taking.
Thanks to Ulaca and the setter.
Smack on target to the second at 45.00 for this, briefly being held up by 1ac THESP my LOI, where I eventually found the answer without parsing the TSP part of it. I didn’t really care much for TRAINSPOTTERISH as a clue, I feel it’s a bit of a convoluted word and not one I’d expect to see in the crossword.
An easy stroll until I was left with T*E*P and couldn’t see THESP or believe it was a word. I’m just not enough of a theatre luvvy I guess. My FOI was 1d which opened it all up, then ASTROLABE. I toyed with Ether for 2d until I realised it was (F)ESTER. 15 minutes with 1a left unfilled until I came here. INQUEST gets Cod.
Could not get beyond thinking HARRYPOTTERISH must describe a nerd. And also POOTERISH means something similar.
DNF due to THESP. Had no trouble with taking half of the middle out of create but did with TONER – having led an equally sheltered life. Couldn’t get off LINES in the middle of BEEFINESS for some time – still, a decent time for me (except for thesp).
Under 40 minutes for me, which is reasonably satisfying by my standards. No problem with THESP or ADMIN as abbreviations, in my experience they are very commonly used. Like a commentator above, I think TRAINSPOTTERISH is a very ugly word. Thanks both.
19’10”. Been off for a few days cos Internet down. Orange (ex-France Telecom) b****dy useless. Felt this should have been quicker work, but maybe I’m out of practice. I see Thursday was a 190+ on the Snitch. I look forward. I was slow on EMOTICON because of last-minute doubts about the CON bit. A CON’s a criminal, not a fool — I thought. Till the light dawned! Also spent too long thinking of a synonym for BACKWOODSMAN for 8d, before realising it was an actual small place that was referred to. Many thanks as ever.
Quite quick today but with a big hold-up on my last three: TONER, INQUEST and SQUARE. I had also tried INSPECT.
Had to think hard about THESP.
COD to PROVERB , maybe a chestnut but I liked it.
Agree with BW about trainspotting.
Off to watch Fred Dibnah on repeat (Yesterday Channel).
David