Sunday Times 5156 by David McLean – read between the lines

9:51. This was a steady solve, largely uneventful but 1ac certainly raised a smile. Yes, I said smile. I don’t remember coming across the term DAYSTAR before, and I’m not sure I knew of the city, but both were clear from wordplay. How did you get on?

Definitions are underlined, anagrams indicated like (TIHS)*, deletions like this, anagram indicators are in italics.

Across
1 Tablet providing IT support?
VIAGRA – CD. IT here being in the nudge-wink sense.
4 A turn in Cream or Foreigner
AMERICAN – A, (IN CREAM)*.
10 Fish experts holding key for cases
CARAPACES – CAR(A)P, ACES.
11 Some in catalepsy nodding in assembly
SYNOD – contained in ‘catalepsy nodding’.
12 Flood in Split on other side of hill
TORRENT – TOR (hill), RENT.
14 I fleece and jerk around one stupid
IDIOTIC – I, D(I)O, TIC.
15 Lean hero in debt sadly thus?
ON THE BREADLINE – (LEAN HERO IN DEBT)*. Semi-&Lit.
18 Protected structure in Pisan tower?
LISTED BUILDING – a definition and a cryptic hint. This concept has appeared before. ‘City with famous listed building’ giving PISA in puzzle 28764, ‘maybe the tower of Pisa’s special property’ in ST 4956, and more.
22 Noble’s extremely ropey in a state
COUNTRY – COUNT, RopeY.
24 Piece of shrapnel off thunderous weapon
TRIDENT – remove Shrapnel from sTRIDENT.
25 Does one survive, having turned tail?
EXITS – EXIST, with the ‘tail’ (last two letters) reversed. ‘Do one’ is a slang expression meaning to run away, often as an instruction (equivalent to ‘get lost’). A shortening of ‘do a runner’ or ‘do a bunk’ originating in Liverpool and Lancashire.
26 Channel broadcasting telethons
THE SOLENT – (TELETHONS)*.
28 Government department tax on small motors
MINISTRY – MINIS, TRY.
29 A conservative in post gets rise
ASCEND – A, S(C)END.
Down
1 Holiday trade making second arrival at front
VACATION – VOCATION with the second (letter) changed to Arrival.
2 Gas main centrally located by river
AIRmAIn, R.
3 Show on NOW
REPRESENT – RE, PRESENT. NOW is in capitals because that’s how the TV channel is written.
5 Jesus mostly drinks no port
MESSINA – MESSI(N)Ah. So not a very naughty boy.
6 Dish cook left by a slice of iceberg
ROSTI – ROaST, Iceberg.
7 Net contains supply for North African city
CONSTANTINE – (NET CONTAINS)*.
8 Fat chance of fellow being stuck up on rocks
NO DICE – reversal of DON, ICE.
9 A sweet given to diner ultimately is sharper
ACUTER – A, CUTE, dineR.
13 Brit involved with routine punishment
RETRIBUTION – (BRIT ROUTINE)*.
16 Sweets in lounge I put by old man
LOLLIPOPS – LOLL, I, POPS.
17 In a tizzy, I get data mixed up
AGITATED – (I GET DATA)*. You can swap definition and anagram indicator here!
19 Sailor overlooked by Times or Sun
DAYSTAR – DAYS, TAR.
20 One sending one down free of restraints?
UNTIED – UNITED with the I (one) moved down one place.
21 The King in bed is right laugh
SCREAM – S(CR)EAM.
23 Demonstrations abandoned by expert pilots?
TESTSproTESTS.
27 Lamp this writer picked up
EYE – sounds like ‘I’. ‘Lamps’ for eyes is archaic/literary or slang. Somewhat to my surprise it doesn’t feature in Collins or ODE but Chambers and the full-fat OED have it.

12 comments on “Sunday Times 5156 by David McLean – read between the lines”

  1. 22:32
    Uneventful, as K says; probably my best time for one of Harry’s puzzles. I didn’t understand ‘does one’ in 25ac, though, and didn’t know why NOW was capitalized, not that it mattered. In 5d, ‘no’=N? I liked VIAGRA, of course, and THE SOLENT.

  2. I, too, had never heard of DAYSTAR or CONSTANTINE, but the wordplay was generous. Held up at the end for a moment with EXITS since it wasn’t immediately obvious to me how the clue worked. Otherwise, a week later, I don’t remember anything remarkable.

  3. I didn’t find this easy and must have spent an hour on it, although I don’t have an actual time recorded.

    VACATION from ‘holiday’ seemed obvious once I had the V-checker but I took forever to spot the wordplay. EYE for ‘lamp’ would never have occurred to me although now it has been pointed out I may have met it before. Had no idea about the definition at 25ac.

  4. I liked this one very much- perfect fare for a Sunday.

    Is ‘n’ for ‘no’ (5d) now common practice, as this one held me up for quite a while?

    1. It did me, too, but Y and N are frequently used in forms to indicate yes and no, and once I’d thought of that, it seemed fine.

    2. Along with Y for yes, it’s permitted in Sunday Times crosswords, though not yet recorded in dictionaries, on the basis that you can see it rather more often than some of the abbreviations that are – as one example, CE rather than “C of E” for “Church of England” is not routine in my personal experience.

  5. I was quite untroubled by this puzzle, not usually the case with D McLean. No unknowns, only DAYSTAR being fairly unfamiliar except in poetry, though the same applied to ‘lamp’ for eye. No notes, and clearly failed to submit, but one of the LOsI was MINISTRY, which was hardly difficult, but I was panicking as usual at the words ‘Government department tax’.

  6. 25a Exits. I went to Uni in Liverpool and never noticed that “does one” means exits, so I was a bit uncertain here.
    NHO 7d Constantine, but gettable.
    19d Daystar. Not sure I know this word, nor am I sure whether it is Venus or the sun. Wiktionary suggests only = Morning Star, which is Venus but only for half of the time you can see it, as at other times it is Evening Star.
    Thanks keriothe and David McLean.

  7. No major issues with this one.

    – Couldn’t have told you which country CONSTANTINE is in
    – Didn’t know lamp as a term for EYE and assumed there was a kind of lamp called an eye lamp
    – Had to smirk once I worked out VIAGRA

    Thanks keriothe and David.

    FOI Agitated
    LOI Exits
    COD Viagra

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