I hope everyone here and their loved ones are well and safe. Having a distraction like a good crossword puzzle in a time like this can be a godsend. To tackle a problem for which there is known to be a solution is a great relief from the more intractable ones facing us, and finishing brings a feeling of being in control that is too often elusive in our day to day lives in the midst of a pandemic. As long as you can concentrate, that is… I found thoughts intruding of aspects of our current mess while working and blogging this excellent offering from Dean.
Slippery surfaces, cunning wordplay, and a few words that you don’t see everyday… Really everything you could ask for, an instant classic.
I indicate (maragnas)* like this, and italicize anagrinds in the clues.
| ACROSS | |
| 1 | 20 shillings, cents or euros? (5) |
| SCORE — S(hillings) + C(ents) + OR + E(uros) | |
| 4 | Marine guide possibly working for island (6,3) |
| DORSAL FIN — (for island)* I guess the appendage can fulfill other functions, hence the “possibly.” | |
| 9 | Best time to run in defeat (9) |
| WORTHIEST — WOR(T)(HIE)ST Yes, “worst” can mean “best,” in referring to coming out ahead in a competition. | |
| 10 | Golden arches—usual rubbish is consumed, primarily (5) |
| AURIC — Gag me with a spoon! First letters, COD. The irony is that the most (in)famous patron of the fast-food chain so clearly alluded to here doubtlessly does not know the answer word, nor could even guess its sense (even though it is the first name of the James Bond villain Goldfinger). It has nothing to do with the ear—unlike auricular!—but it is the last name of French composer Georges. It has a very precise meaning in chemistry, and a homonym refers to the auras that soi-disant psychics supposedly see. | |
| 11 | Perhaps those in rubber will excite more of us (8) |
| FOURSOME — (more of us)* I suppose the reference is to the game of bridge. I have included “will” in the anagrind, because otherwise it isn’t doing anything. | |
| 12 | Go about as a bird would go! (4,2) |
| BEAT IT — BE A TIT This phrase has been clued many times here by breaking up the words this way, with sometimes TIT meaning a silly person. | |
| 14 | Liquid runs so if retaining “A”, “X” being liquid property (7,7) |
| SURFACE TENSION — (runs so if)* surrounding ACE + TEN | |
| 17 | Keep going to Latin classes (3,11) |
| NIL DESPERANDUM — You can probably attend them remotely now… ”Never despair!” in Latin. A watchword for our fraught time. Keep Calm and Carry On! | |
| 19 | Lounge lizard initially bends over (6) |
| SPRAWL — L[-izard] + “bends,” WARPS<=“over” | |
| 20 | Ready for battle (3,5) |
| WAR CHEST — Got your mask on? CD, “Ready” in the sense of available money | |
| 23 | Old magistrate taking bible class the day before (5) |
| REEVE — R(eligious) E(ducation) + EVE | |
| 24 | Spring lecture given without single drink (9) |
| ORIGINATE — OR(I)(GIN)ATE | |
| 25 | Sea lion swallows a large piece of meat (9) |
| MEDALLION — MED(A)(L)LION, “Sea” being the MEDiterranean | |
| 26 | Dyed fabric clothing sailor returned (5) |
| BATIK—“Clothing,” KIT + “sailor,” AB<=“returned” | |
| DOWN | |
| 1 | Forced to leave prune? (3,3) |
| SAW OFF — DD “See off” with this precise meaning was new to me; it’s a strictly British usage. | |
| 2 | Work in China for US? (3,6,6) |
| OUR MUTUAL FRIEND — “China,” of course, being CRS for ”pal,” and “US” an example of the deceptive capitalization we haven’t seen on Sunday lately. We had a reference to this book not so long ago. | |
| 3 | Standards maintained by internet hosting (5) |
| ETHOS — Hidden | |
| 4 | Daughter opens robe in fantastic scene (10) |
| DREAMSCAPE — Paging Dr. Freud… D(aughter) + REAMS, “opens” + CAPE, “robe” The closest definition I’ve found for REAM is “to enlarge (a hole) as with a reamer” (Collins). MER at CAPE clued by “robe”; the words are not synonyms of each other at thesaurus dot com, nor listed as such anywhere else that I’ve found. | |
| 5 | No introduction needed for gospel book (4) |
| RUTH — [-t]RUTH | |
| 6 | Greek hero soon captures willing maiden (9) |
| AGAMEMNON — A(GAME)(M)NON | |
| 7 | Officer left in tears, unit disbanded (5,10) |
| FIRST LIEUTENANT — (left in tears, unit)* | |
| 8 | Good to admit oxygen can poison (8) |
| NICOTINE — This is actually true! NIC(O)(TIN)E The substance is merely addictive taken via conventional tobacco products, but liquid nicotine and e-cigarettes can be hazardous, as the stuff in a purer form and at higher doses is indeed quite toxic. | |
| 13 | Result of zero fare? A motorhome to take Channel crossing (10) |
| STARVATION — No, this isn’t the clue to the next one…! CD, ST(A)(RV)ATION | |
| 15 | Coast, where waves seem to gather? (9) |
| FREEWHEEL — (where)* caught up in FEEL, “seem” | |
| 16 | Physicist’s worry over traveller (8) |
| ANGSTROM — ANGST, “worry” + ROM, “traveller,” singular for Roma, which is short for Romani (sometimes called Gypsies, which some take as pejorative). The unit of length named after Swedish physicist Anders Jonas Ångström, equal to one hundred-millionth of a centimeter, is mainly useful in expressing wavelengths and distances between atoms. | |
| 18 | Run out of clothes? (6) |
| STREAK — Well, the closest laundromat is limiting its hours now, but I’m not going out much or for very long, and most things can be washed in the tub… CD | |
| 21 | Conservative member’s rise (5) |
| CLIMB — C + LIMB Bit of a chestnut, easiest clue here. | |
| 22 | Wet place over one dry place (4) |
| GOBI — BOG<=“over” + I I guessed GOB was a “wet place” in the sense of “mouth,” either yer own or even perhaps that of a river, until Peter pointed out what should have been obvious! | |
11A Think you mean “included in anag indicator”
12A def = final “go!”
22D wet place = bog, over = reversal rather than posititional indicator
12A Yeah, underlined the wrong one.
22D How did I miss that?!
LOI 16dn ANGSTROM a second show this week
COD 19ac SPRAWL
WOD 1dn SAW OFF – what one does to the end of one’s Purdey, before and after one’s wayward daughter’s wedding.
‘Low wholesale prices on huge selection of top quality Mens Capes/Robes costumes for Halloween.’ The trade appears to lump them as a whole, on-line. Also ‘Wool Cape Robe’ noted.
Time fifty minutes.
COD to STARVATION.
Edited at 2020-03-29 07:03 am (UTC)
At Lexico dot com, there’s a UK and a US dictionary, and under Other DIctionaries, just Spanish.
At Collins dot com, there seems to be only one English dictionary, but if I go to a Collins definition via a Google search, which is what I always do, I see that /us/ gets added inside the URL.
Edited at 2020-03-29 06:38 am (UTC)
“Very few dialects follow the rule of the lterary language according to which ‘an’ is used before a vowel …” J. Wright, “The English Dialect Grammar” 1905.
Use of ‘a’ before a vowel is common in AAVE in the US.
The classic example, of course, is Mr. Bumble’s “The law is a ass, a idiot.”
Not that any of this is relevant to the clue, of course.
Edited at 2020-03-29 07:32 am (UTC)
I meant, though I didn’t say, that I wouldn’t know what specific dialect to attribute such usage to.
I didn’t know it was considered a characteristic of AAVE, but of course I’ve heard people speak that way all my life.
Edited at 2020-03-29 07:41 am (UTC)
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There were quite a few I couldn’t parse properly (Dreamscape,Freewheel,Starvation) -thanks for explaining those. But I shot myself in the foot with 25a. I was solving on paper and the last letter of Freewheel intersects. The bottom of the L disappeared in the outline of the puzzle and I suddenly went a la carte and put in Medaillon (de boeuf etc).Then I was completely stumped by 22d and put in POOL.
Otherwise LOI was WORTHIEST having corrected 1d where SET OFF had remained for too long.
Very enjoyable puzzle. COD to Our Mutual Friend. David
I actually did this one on Tuesday afternoon, and OUR MUTUAL FRIEND was a write-in, since it appeared in that day’s Times puzzle.
DNK what the RV was in STARVATION, and only parsed FREEWHEEL later.
I saw Simon and Garfunkel at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester, and they closed the set (their seventh or eighth encore !) with “a song I haven’t finished writing yet”. When Paul launched into “I wish I was a Kellogg’s Corn Flake” I doubt that I was alone in thinking that he’d turned on his urine extractor. At that stage the lyric “If I became a FIRST LIEUTENANT, would you put my photo on the piano” was the unwritten part of “Punky’s Dilemma” which appeared on the album “Bookends” a couple of months later. Obviously I had an earworm for the rest of the day.
FOI SCORE
LOI RUTH
COD NIL DESPERANDUM
TIME 17:04
“You want ventilators and masks from the federal government’s reserves to treat your citizens? Well, governors have to treat me well, it’s a two-way street.”
FOI 3d ETHOS LOI 19a SPRAWL, enjoying the marine guide at 4a the most, I think, though 12a would probably have won COD if I’d not seen its like before…
Edited at 2020-03-29 02:55 pm (UTC)
Edited at 2020-03-29 11:17 am (UTC)
Nice blog, as always, Guy. Nice puzzle, as always, Dean. Nice clarity, as always, Peter.
Yet another Dean (four in a row now) as I go over back log puzzles … and another good one that took well over the hour to finish.
Took a while to get into, despite getting the long FIRST LIEUTENANT quite early on. the other long ones came much later in the exercise. Didn’t really think about the word play for OUR MUTUAL FRIEND until reading the blog – and in retrospect, think that it was very clever.
Finished in the SE corner with ORIGINATE (with its well camouflaged definition) and the well-constructed CLIMB as the last one.