Fun puzzle, on the gentler end of things.
I crept in a few seconds under the five minute mark, which doesn’t happen too often. Some nice things mixed in with those good old favourites like ‘antipasti’ and ‘Etna’, including a bit of a chuckle on realising the ‘PM, briefly’ wasn’t deducting the last letter from a six-lettered PM.
In fact, there seem to be a mere four six-lettered prime ministers: two are fairly gettable, but come to the front of the class for a very large cupcake (sometimes just called a cake) if you manage either of the others.
Answer:
Good breezy fun – many thanks to Dangle!
| Across | |
| 7 | Tolerate rabid English hosts (5) |
| ABIDE – is “hosted” by rABID English | |
| 8 | Ghost beginning to panic Chinese male (7) |
| PHANTOM – P, HAN (Chinese), TOM (male – as in a male animal, rather than a random male name) | |
| 10 | Curse about the missing hot clothing (7) |
| SWEATER – SWEAR (curse) about TE (T |
|
| 11 | Come a cropper collecting large medieval weapon (5) |
| FLAIL – FAIL (come a cropper) collecting L(arge). News to me (mercifully) but now I know the origin of “to flail about”. A mace on a chain, basically. The flail was originally a tool for threshing corn, but vaguely serviceable as a weapon if needs must, à la pitchfork: think nunchucks, which probably also derive from it. | |
| 12 | A new suggestion to go with sparkling wine: hors d’oeuvres (9) |
| ANTIPASTI – A, N(ew), TIP (suggestion) to go with ASTI (sparkling wine) | |
| 14 | Asian city close to Tokyo (3) |
| LAO – LA (city), closing letter of tokyO | |
| 15 | Sharp intake of breath after son disappears in hole (3) |
| GAP – GASP (sharp intake of breath) loses S(on) | |
| 16 | Prises end off vending machine, perhaps (9) |
| DISPENSER – anagram (off) of PRISES END | |
| 18 | Tie up PM, briefly (5) |
| TRUSS – double definition, the second as in Liz Truss, the less said about the better. | |
| 20 | Stuffy, bald husband leaves (7) |
| AIRLESS – HAIRLESS (bald), H(usband) leaving | |
| 22 | Trio tactfully concealing 18th-century legislation (4,3) |
| RIOT ACT – concealed in tRIO TACTfully | |
| 23 | Defy British party (5) |
| BRAVE – B(ritish) RAVE (party) | |
| Down | |
| 1 | Chuckling, after bloke initially suggests unlawful killing (12) |
| MANSLAUGHTER – LAUGHTER (chuckling) after MAN (bloke) and S (“initially” Suggests) | |
| 2 | Avoid team’s favourite somersaulting (8) |
| SIDESTEP – SIDE’S (team’s) PET (favourite) “somersaults” = reverses | |
| 3 | Second time in faction (4) |
| SECT – SEC(ond) T(ime) | |
| 4 | Rejects special containers for tea (6) |
| SPURNS – SP(ecial) URNS (containers for tea) | |
| 5 | Face fine for developing stimulant (8) |
| CAFFEINE – anagram (for developing) of FACE FINE | |
| 6 | Smoker in canteen upset (4) |
| ETNA – “in” cANTEen “upset” – reverse | |
| 9 | Underfed, mishandle our careers (12) |
| MALNOURISHED – anagram (careers) of MISHANDLE OUR. As in to career (or indeed flail) about. | |
| 13 | Editor stops troublesome individual with a large platform (8) |
| PEDESTAL – ED(itor) stops PEST (troublesome individual) with A L(arge) | |
| 14 | Salvages lost city (3,5) |
| LAS VEGAS – anagram (lost) of SALVAGES | |
| 17 | Inadequate theory voided following study (6) |
| SCANTY – TY (T |
|
| 19 | University fellow is a noodle (4) |
| UDON – U(niversity) DON (fellow) | |
| 21 | Polish base of shiny gemstone (4) |
| RUBY – RUB (polish) Y (“base” of shinY) | |
Pi (3:14)
Lovely misdirect in 18ac with “briefly” looking like a wordplay indicator
I agree – brilliant. Sort of the opposite of a “lift and separate”, I wonder if it has a name?
Easily my cod. (No rolytoly cake for me took me a while to get Wilson at which point I gave up)
No question mark so I took it literally.
Do indicators usually have question marks?
Sorry, indicator is probably the wrong word – as a pedestrian, I’m a little hung up on indicators because drivers don’t seem to know what they are – I just meant that “briefly” looked like wordplay.
Pretty easy. I saw manslaughter right away, but malnourished had to wait until the end. We just had dispenser, didn’t we?
Time 5:22
Blew it, couldn’t get BRAVE, but the rest was mostly straightforward and the long downs were there to be hit, which helped. Thanks Dangle and Roly.
9:20 – found it very tough today for some reason – wasn’t thinking straight. Some great clues though. Agree with LouWeed that the Truss clue was excellent. And yes, the easy two PMs only came to mind.
Not so easy for me. Only four on the first pass for a second day in a row but all those checkers from MANSLAUGHTER helped a lot. Ended up needing a long time to get to SPURNS having spent a fair while on BRAVE. ETNA was harder than it should have been. All green in 13.38. Good one.
9 minutes. I missed the PMs other than the obvious ones. NHO UDON.
Sainsbury’s sells Udon noodles as a staple item in its aisle. Thanks to that I was sure about Udon when solving.
In my experience, udon, soba, and ramen are the only words you need to know to cope with any Japanese noodle clue in Crosswordland.
23:59 (average: 37, target: 29:30)
Mostly easy going. Some of the anagrams (DISPENSER and LAS VEGAS) stood out so clearly I could see the answer before I read the clue. I got a bit bogged down in the SE corner with SCANTY, RUBY and BRAVE. BRAVE added about 4 mins to my time and even now I can’t make it fit as neatly as a synonym for defy as I normally do. RAVE crops up a lot though so I should have seen it quicker.
I too enjoyed the humour of the wordplay on TRUSS. My COD.
If you go out in a storm you ‘brave the elements’??
Thanks for the help Barry!
Personally until now I’d always seen a large semantic gap between “defy the elements” and “brave the elements” where the first is an act of intentional resistance against the supposed will of the elements and the second is an act of personal courage against an uncontrollable force, but not a direct opposition to a will which I thought of as being the core of defiance.
I think after considering it during the day and looking at some examples that boundary is not always as distinct as I’d thought and often the two words are used more interchangeably. Certainly easy to find the synonym referenced virtually everywhere. So I definitely learnt something today. Thanks again!
DNF, sadly.
I flew through this, heading for a decent time, until I was totally breezeblocked by BRAVE and SCANTY. Just couldn’t see them. Dope.
Pi ❤️
Did you notice that Lou Weed wasn’t QTPi
Hah! So he was. But only by 0.00159265…
Same here – the last 2 derailed me. Head slap when I read the explanations.
Nice and straightforward again although I was oblivious to the PMs, apart from she who shall not be named
Started with MANSLAUGHTER and finished with SCANTY in 4.56 with COD to 18a.
Thanks to Rolytoly and Dangle
Exactly 9 minutes. I agree that 18a was a very good clue.
Mistyped ASIDE, which delayed my getting my LOI SIDESTEP.
Thanks Roly and Dangle
‘PM, briefly’ lovely indeed. I’ve come up with Attlee, Wilson, can’t think of –and now that I’ve looked, realize I never knew–the others. NOT Farage, anyway. 5:22
I wasn’t helped by thinking that Keir Hardie was once PM.
DNF. I pink square in 22 mins
Just couldn’t get LAO. I picked a vowel at random in the end. Clever clue.
The rest I found straightforward once I got going.
FOI: GAP
LOI: ” LOO”
CODs TRUSS and LAO.
Thanks Dangle and rolytoly
I enjoyed this one, as I continue to be slightly confused by the new look of the online version.
My LOI was 18ac, having failed to get it on the first pass, probably for the same reason as our blogger, i.e. not bringing to mind a PM of six letters. I also failed to spot for a time that it was the last remaining clue, implying that an unsolved clue is somehow less obvious to my eyes in the new format. Such delays made my final time 8:14, or in other words, slightly longer than 18ac I think.
9:48 with SCANTY corrected after bunging in swatty. Was getting increasingly irritated by the screen scrolling off the page as I cursored up and down trying letters in there. I would have said to scan is the opposite of studying something – a cursory glance versus a detailed read.
Despite it going in quickly, I didn’t really much enjoy it. Don’t know HAN, LAO, UDON while ABIDE=tolerate, BRAVE=defy and aforementioned SCAN=study not my first choices.
COD TRUSS but have no idea where to find these other PMs. I just scanned the grid and can’t see them and the blog doesn’t explain.
Thanks to Rolytoly and Dangle
My iPad version of the blog has a yellow ‘show more’ link at the end of Roly’s introduction. I didn’t have the patience to try to find old PMs myself.
Thanks – yes I got that too. I subsequently realised Roly was just quiz questioning us on six-letter PMs. Nothing to do with the contents of the grid other than the Truss clue.
Yes, that penny only dropped for me after a quick look at the grid!
I had exactly the same thoughts about scan and study.
There is no way I would use them in any sentence to get the same meaning.
Didn’t find this as easy as our blogger, only getting for across clues at first pass, but finding the down clues more straightforward. A couple of biffs (PHANTOM, SCANTY) and a finish in 21:15, about average for me.
A steady solve in 17mins for me (but I had to check the unknown noodle). I would have done better if I had looked at 1d early on rather than jumping round the grid looking for ‘sitters’. I also wasted time on 10ac trying to form an anagram from CURSE and TE.
Just off to check Roly’s blog to enjoy some of the clues properly but TRUSS has to be my COD – a very good clue.
Thanks to Dangle and Roly.
9 minutes. FLAIL as a ‘medieval weapon’ was a NHO but wasn’t difficult to work out. The rest went in steadily enough with TRUSS being my favourite too.
Thank to roly and Dangle
19:24 not sure why. Brave Lao Sect had something to do with it.
Ta R&D
Wow – got away with LOI FLAIL! Thank you, Roly, for explaining that, also the Chinese HAN (searched for HANTO but apart from one random Chinese restaurant in USA, nothing) and SWEATER. I’m sure we all enjoyed TRUSS.
Oh, I forgot this, spelling of CAFFEINE: the E had to be there due to the crossers, but I worried for a while due to the rule “I before E except after C … when it rhymes with bee”, to which there are very few exceptions, notably seize (also the names Keith and Sheila). So here’s another.
No, despite “dredging”, can’t see even WILSON – can someone please explain for those of us at the bottom of the class?
Hmm, the others are just further examples of six letter PMs, none of whom appear in the puzzle itself.
Thank you – I see! But surely it’s all a bit of a red herring, isn’t it?
. . .certainly a smörgåsbord 😉 of facts
I also had caffiene to start until the chemistry came to the recue. -ENE denotes a type of hydrocarbon (e.g. ethylene), whereas INE denotes (amongst other things) an alkaloid (E.g. nicotine, codeine & caffeine)
19 something minutes… still settling into new format.
1d and 9d in first – slow with ETNA – added a minute or so.
Post blog, we see it took longer than it should have, not sure why… a lot of little hesitations and plodding thinking ..dragging feet a bit.
Enjoyed. : )
Thank you Rolytoly and Dangle
I’m not on the wavelength of Dangle, and it took me a while to get into the puzzle with enough crossers to biff the clues that didn’t spring to mind. Consequently I had the B from RUBY to make BRAVE a write in. 18a was excellent misdirection. LOI was SPURNS, which took far too long to come to mind. However, all fair and all known vocabulary, so no complaints.
Didn’t know the noodle, but UDON seemed more likely than UBOD. From ABIDE to RUBY in 6:55. Thanks Dangle and Roly.
My fourth sub ten minute target beating time of the week, finishing in 9.02. I didn’t think this was at all straightforward, and my overall feeling was that I was on song to finish in the time I achieved. BRAVE was my LOI, but I had to trust to luck on the unheard of UDON.
Thank you for the NHO “on song”, a lovely piece of slang unknown here in my part of the world. Can’t wait for it to show up in a cryptic.
This turned out to be a lot easier than I expected from Dangle. Unfortunately I needed an alpha-trawl to get round a complete block on loi Scan/Study and that nudged me into the SCC. Otherwise a steady top to bottom solve. CoD to 18ac. Invariant
PS What about John Stuart (1762 – 63) as the fifth member of the six letter club ?
I finished in 4:38 with NHO LAO, but unfortunately fat-fingered “scamty”. Adjacent keys have been a problem again this week, just as I thought I’d started to control my typo habit. COD TRUSS.
11.39 so comfortably inside my target for online solving but would have been faster if I could remember that the new improved format doesn’t recognise when the first letter of an answer already exists. Nevertheless, pleased to have a gentle offering after yesterday’s DNF fiasco when I was too discombobulated by the changes to bother.
15 minutes of hard work for me. LOI was LAO; NHO and required some time to think through.
Also NHO UDON but parsing was clear I thought- but, as noted above, UBOD also “works”.
A difficult grid meant that nothing came easily.
But I enjoyed it, especially TRUSS,CAFFEINE and BRAVE.
David
19 mins…
Probably one of the easiest Dangles since they started. The two long clues down each side were fairly straightforward and helped with the rest of the grid. Main hold up was 17dn “Scanty” and debating whether 19dn “Udon” was correct (although I couldn’t see it being anything else). Even 14ac “Lao” took longer than it probably should.
FOI – 15ac “Gap”
LOI – 17dn “Scanty”
COD – 15ac “Gap”
Thanks as usual!
10:41 for me, with LAO bunged in with crossed fingers.
Thank you for the blog!
This seems to be very easy or pretty hard – we were the latter at 29 minutes with several learning opportunities (flail,lao,udon)
Thanks as ever to setter and blogger