In the meantime, in between time, ain’t we got fun? This crossword took us from sunup with the swelling sound of birdsong (kookaburras, for example) to sundown (time for supper), but it was a quick journey. Lots of clues will be easy pickings for the experienced solvers, but a nice workout too. Thanks to the setter for a very enjoyable puzzle.
Notes for newcomers: The Times offers prizes for Saturday Cryptic Crosswords. This blog is posted a week later, after the competition closes. So, please don’t comment here on the current Saturday Cryptic.
Clues are blue, with definitions underlined. Deletions are in {curly brackets}.
| Across | |
| 1 | Draw on such training for early performance? (4,6) |
| DAWN CHORUS – anagram (‘training’) of DRAW ON SUCH. | |
| 7 | Hell: make sure not opening (4) |
| HECK – {c}HECK, not opening. The bowdlerised form of the exclamation. | |
| 9 | One is in classroom erasing all content — embarrassing mistake (8) |
| SOLECISM – SOLE (one, as in ‘sole survivor’), then IS in C{lassroo}M, ‘erasing content’. | |
| 10 | Twist, say, regularly in speech as picked up by some? (6) |
| ORPHAN – sounds like ‘often’, as pronounced by those who say ORF’N. Not me, for one! | |
| 11 | Elite test beyond dope (6) |
| GENTRY – TRY (test) ‘beyond’ i.e. after GEN (dope). | |
| 13 | Ringtone destroyed much of the atmosphere (8) |
| NITROGEN – anagram (‘destroyed’) of RINGTONE. 78% of the earth’s atmosphere is nitrogen. | |
| 14 | Unusual sighting possible result of bull in china shop? (6,6) |
| FLYING SAUCER – double definition, the second fanciful. | |
| 17 | Snake in river rank, a source of irritation (12) |
| EXASPERATING – ASP in the EXE, then RATING On edit: the comments highlight that some solvers expected the answer to be EXASPERATION, until of course it didn’t fit the crossing letters. Actually, the clue supports either answer depending on whether the definition is “a source of irritation”, or just “irritation” (with “source of” as filler). | |
| 20 | Cattle fed with silage ultimately supporting source of beef (8) |
| HEREFORD – HERD (cattle) fed with {silage}E and FOR (supporting). | |
| 21 | Lower school period for dictation? (6) |
| LESSEN – sounds like ‘lesson’. | |
| 22 | Noise coming from trampolinist about unknown sport (6) |
| BOXING – BOING about X (unknown). | |
| 23 | Acolyte to cheer after change announced (5,3) |
| ALTAR BOY – sounds like BUOY (cheer) after ALTER (change). | |
| 25 | Contact criminal group (4) |
| RING – double definition. | |
| 26 | Toad putting salt on rabbit (10) |
| NATTERJACK – NATTER (rabbit), JACK (salt). NHO this beast. | |
| Down | |
| 2 | Primarily muscle around meat, nothing left (5,3) |
| ABOVE ALL – AB (muscle), then O (nothing) + (left) ‘around’ VEAL (meat). I puzzled for a while before I saw how the assembly instructions work. A bit like reading the instructions for flat-pack furniture? | |
| 3 | Born leaders in New England, evidently (3) |
| NEE – first letters of each word. | |
| 4 | Scary — as a lycanthrope? (5) |
| HAIRY – another double definition. A lycanthrope is a werewolf, apparently – hence the hairiness. | |
| 5 | Country very soon captured by a king after uprising (7) |
| ROMANIA – IN A MO (very soon) ‘captured by’ the letter A and R (king), and all reversed (‘uprising’). | |
| 6 | Show mark for fast runner (9) |
| SPORTSCAR – or, SPORT SCAR. | |
| 7 | Doctor prophetic — as his father? (11) |
| HIPPOCRATES – anagram (‘doctor’) of PROPHETIC AS. I found the definition a little hard to pin down, but Hippocrates is known as “the Father of Medicine”. | |
| 8 | County town’s first blood (6) |
| CLARET – CLARE, T{own}. | |
| 12 | Night I suspect closing in around supper time? Latish today (4,7) |
| THIS EVENING – anagram (‘suspect’) of NIGHT I, ‘around’ SEVEN. Not when I eat supper, but that’s why the question mark’s there, of course. | |
| 15 | Stylish magazine for cricketing county (9) |
|
GLAMORGAN – GLAM, ORGAN. I’m sure they do play cricket there, and no doubt someone can tell us why it’s specifically defined as a ‘cricketing county’. On edit: thanks to |
|
| 16 | Yellow hue with corn, I gathered (8) |
| UNHEROIC – anagram (‘gathered’) of HUE CORN I. | |
| 18 | School players downloaded audio file (7) |
| PODCAST – POD, CAST. | |
| 19 | A little thinner, olive oil (6) |
| NEROLI – hidden answer. It’s an oil distilled from oranges, not olives. | |
| 21 | Hard to block slow spinner (5) |
| LATHE – H in LATE. | |
| 24 | Rule long gone, drink up (3) |
| RAJ – JAR ‘up’. | |
It took me a while to get started, and also to finish, although I shouldn’t really have needed to alpha-trawl my LOI.
FOI GENTRY
LOI SPORTSCAR
COD BOXING (pace Zebedee)
TIME 13:29
Edited at 2020-06-20 01:52 am (UTC)
Edited at 2020-06-20 05:57 am (UTC)
The county cricket team still play as just ‘Glamorgan’ although the former county of Glamorgan was split, for some reason, into three counties – south, mid and west Glamorgan in about 1974.
Edited at 2020-06-20 06:22 am (UTC)
Perfectly happy with ORPHAN. We get Cockerney-speak all the time (dropped aitches and the like) so what’s wrong with a bit of posh for the sake of balance? Actually a lot of people used to say ‘orf’ for ‘off’ when I was growing up, including the Head Master at my school who used to regularly announce that on certain days (e.g. last day of term’) he expected all boys to be ‘orf the premises’ by a certain time. But they weren’t all posh. Many people from the ‘lower orders’ of society aspired to better themselves and picked up certain pronunciations accordingly. ‘Orf’ was one of them, and another was a flat E instead of A in some words e.g. ‘Elbert’ for ‘Albert’. Sometimes it amounted to putting on airs and graces, as portrayed by the wonderful Joyce Carey as the refreshment room lady in the film ‘Brief Encounter’, but mostly it was unconscious and perfectly innocent.
Edited at 2020-06-20 05:49 am (UTC)
Otherwise NTR. I’ve no notes about any candidates for COD.
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“He’s exasperating” ~= “he’s a source of irritation”.
At least I finished correctly and remembered how to spell ALTAR; nearly slipped up there.
COD to GENTRY only because it reminded me of Preston North End’s gentry day when our fans wear bowler hats,collars and ties to an away game. Please don’t ask me why.
David
FOI 3dn NEE
COD yet another 14ac FLYING SAUCER
WOD 26ac NATTERJACK
Edited at 2020-06-20 06:21 pm (UTC)
imo, unless it’s a perfect match for all dialects (never going to happen), then the more toe-curling the better I like it
(but, like hiddens, no more than once in the same x-word)