What fun! A great piece of grid filling by Juno to mark today’s anniversary… and some pretty good clues too. I was about 1/2 way through solving before I realised exactly what was going on. My LOI was 20D, which was a write-in given the theme – you surely can’t have missed that every answer incudes “VE”? I was a bit slow to start but finished just a few seconds over 5 minutes, so, with the aid of the theme, I don’t think it can be too hard. But I’m sure you will let me know if I got that wrong! COD to 14A for the lovely incorporation of the theme in the surface, but 15A is pretty good too. Beautifully done, Juno. Thanks! How did you all like it?
Definitions underlined in bold italics, (Abc)* indicating anagram of Abc, deletions and [] other indicators.
| Across | |
| 7 | Annoying very old partner, one no good (6) |
| VEXING – V (very) EX (old partner) I (one) NG (no good). | |
| 8 | Gutted, venerable European socialist changed direction (6) |
|
VEERED – V |
|
| 9 | More intelligent installing bar in church? Right! (8) |
| CLEVERER – Insert [installing… in] LEVER (bar) in CE (Church of England; church) R (right). Bar in a church? Yes it can be done… like in the marvellous Michaelhouse Centre in Cambridge. | |
| 10 | Turning back periodically unnerves Swede, perhaps (4) |
| SVEN – Alternate letters [periodically] of uNnErVeS reversed [turning back]. | |
| 11 | Suddenly turn to render assistance, grabbing wife (6) |
| SWERVE – SERVE (render assistance) outside [grabbing] W (wife). | |
| 13 | Worked out only daughter’s about five (6) |
| SOLVED – SOLE (only) D (daughter) [about] V (five). | |
| 14 | US ex-serviceman, seventy-five today? Much less than that (3) |
| VET – Neatly hidden [much less than that] in seventy-fiVE Today. Lovely surface. VE day was, of course, 75 years ago today. | |
| 15 | Struggle to eat what’s laid for breakfast? One would if it’s bacon (6) |
| VEGGIE – VIE (struggle) outside [to eat] EGG (what’s laid for breakfast) and an all-in-one semi-&lit cryptic definition. Laid for breakfast. Ho ho! VEGGIE is short for vegetarian – if you were one you wouldn’t be wanting the bacon. | |
| 17 | Prevents vast reforms overwhelming monarch (6) |
| AVERTS – (vast)* [reforms] outside [overwhelming] ER (The Queen; monarch). | |
| 19 | 14 having zero power to stop (4) |
| VETO – VET (answer to 14A) O (zero). | |
| 20 | Better than average sort of pea — bravo! (5,3) |
| ABOVE PAR – [sort of] (pea – bravo)*. Mind you, at golf “above par” is worse not better. | |
| 22 | Hard to translate verse? Easy at first (6) |
| SEVERE – [translate] (verse)* Easy [at first]. | |
| 23 | Flatter male TV personage in the bar, last of all (6) |
| EVENER – last letters of [last of all] malE TV personagE iN thE baR. | |
| Down | |
| 1 | ’E tucked into girl’s meat (4) |
| VEAL – ‘E inside [tucked into] VAL (girl). | |
| 2 | Second prize for pirate (6) |
| SILVER – Double definition. The second referring to Long John Silver. | |
| 3 | Give gear mistakenly, causing distress (8) |
| AGGRIEVE – (Give gear)* [mistakenly]. | |
| 4 | High temperature not starting at any time (4) |
| EVER – fEVER (High temperature)* [not starting]. | |
| 5 | Elves wandering around close to this craft (6) |
| VESSEL – (Elves)* [wandering] [around] [close to] thiS. | |
| 6 | Furious, means to escape across English border (8) |
| VEHEMENT – VENT (means to escape) [across] E (English) HEM (border). | |
| 12 | At unspecified place in meadow, he reverses (8) |
| WHEREVER – Hidden [in] meadoW HE REVERses. | |
| 13 | Voter, say, unexpectedly to be a Remainer? (4,4) |
| STAY OVER – (Voter, say)* [unexpectedly]. A bit of a cheeky definition. | |
| 16 | Crawl, lazily, at first, beneath small plantation (6) |
| GROVEL – Lazily [at first] [beneath] GROVE (small plantation). | |
| 18 | Football or cricket team’s prime? (6) |
| ELEVEN – Cryptic definition. There are ELEVEN players on a football or cricket team and 11 is a prime number. | |
| 20 | Welcome small bird’s class (4) |
| AVES – AVE (welcome in Latin) S (small). “Birds are a group of warm-blooded vertebrates constituting the class Aves.” | |
| 21 | Declare a vicar has turned up (4) |
| AVER – A REV (vicar) [turned up] -> VER. | |
Edited at 2020-05-08 02:52 am (UTC)
FOI 1dn VEAL
LOI 5dn VESSEL
COD All ov’em!
WOD VE DAY!
The real challenge will be 14 August!
Cedric
kpc
Edited at 2020-05-08 07:33 am (UTC)
BTW, the very name Juno as setter might have alerted regulars to the possibility of something special going on. She (?) has given us only 10 puzzles over the past 6 years and all of the last 3 have contained Ninas.
Edited at 2020-05-08 10:28 am (UTC)
Thanks to john and Juno
After a couple of days of trying to go too fast, I tried to parse all these clues before submitting. My last 3 were Vehement (tricky parsing I thought), Aves (not a word I was sure of) and Evener which I had biffed then removed as I couldn’t parse it at first. Finally went back to Evener with 16:15 on the clock. COD to Veggie.
Thanks to John for unravelling this and congratulations to Juno for a brilliant,topical puzzle. David
Edited at 2020-05-08 09:09 am (UTC)
Plymouthian
Missed the theme, must be the crossword mind solving zone.
COD wherever or veggie.
Edited at 2020-05-08 09:57 am (UTC)
EVENER was parsed afterwards.
An excellent puzzle from Juno, and thanks for the blog John.
FOI VEXING
LOI VEHEMENT
COD VEGGIE
Thank you.
Didn’t spot row 11 though.
Diana
In terms of recognising today’s anniversary then I think it was an admirable achievement, however in a strange way knowing that all of the clues contained “VE” kind of spoiled it (purely from a technical solving point of view mind).
FOI – 11ac “Swerve”
LOI – 6dn “Vehement”
COD – 15ac “Veggie”
Thanks as usual.
PlayupPompey
Mixed bag, some VEry easy and some not so, for me.
FOI 9ac Cleverer
LOI 6dn Vehement
COD 15ac Veggie
Thanks to Juno and blogger
FOI VEXING, LOI AVES, COD VEGGIE
Super, super puzzle. Thanks Juno, and thanks for a great blog John.
Templar
I loved VEGGIE but biffed VEHEMENT and I didn’t know that birds were part of the AVES family so thanks for the blog, John.
Well done to Juno and thanks to johninterred for the blog.
Thanks all round, as ever