Time taken: 18:56. I struggled mightily with this one, and I think my difficulty was in second-guessing a few of the defintions, which in my mind did not perfectly fit the answers. I should have just relied on wordplay, which works all the way around.
The other early solvers are taking a little longer than their average times (I’m 3rd on the list at the time of writing this up), so I think it is genuinely difficult.
The first definition in each clue is underlined.
Away we go…
| Across | |
| 1 | Acquisitive chap, as we see it (8) |
| COVETOUS – COVE(chap) TO US (as we see it) | |
| 5 | Back yard fencing weak and sagging (6) |
| DROOPY – reversal of all of the wordplay – YD(yard) containing POOR(weak) | |
| 8 | Stripping off uniform, love holding colonel’s coat (10) |
| UNCLOTHING – U(uniform), then NOTHING(love) containing the exterior letters of ColoneL Edit: I missed the “coat” section originally and just had CL for Colonel | |
| 9 | Without a mark where they should be gained (4) |
| EXAM – EX(without), A, M(mark) | |
| 10 | Put a stop to Rugby’s foul school leader (5,2,3,4) |
| KNOCK ON THE HEAD – the foul in Rugby is a KNOCK ON, then school leader is THE HEAD | |
| 11 | Foreign letter coming in is the French letter (7) |
| EPISTLE – PI(foreign letter), inside EST LE(is the, in French) | |
| 13 | Charge to pack knick-knacks hurriedly (7) |
| AGITATO – AGIO(charge), containing TAT(knick-knacks) – musical term | |
| 15 | At first, bear one fruit or another (7) |
| BANANAS – first letter of Bear then one fruit is ANANAS | |
| 18 | Cited tot defending authoritarian leader (7) |
| ADDUCED – ADD(tot) containing DUCE(Mussolini, authoritarian leader) | |
| 21 | Heady mixture of qualities nurse developed (7,7) |
| TEQUILA SUNRISE – anagram of QUALITIES NURSE. Tequila with grenadine and juice | |
| 22 | A little house might … be this? (4) |
| SEMI – double definition for a little part of, and a house, and to boot, it is hidden inside houSE MIght | |
| 23 | The writer’s twice penning papers of merit (10) |
| IMPRESSIVE – I’M and I’VE (the writer’s twice), containing PRESS(papers) | |
| 24 | Highest-ranking lady has heart stolen roguishly (6) |
| ARCHLY – ARCH(highest-ranking), then LADY without the central letters | |
| 25 | Grant a leader in the papers a column (8) |
| CARYATID – the actor CARY grant, then A, the first letter in The, ID(papers). A carved figure replacing a column | |
| Down | |
| 1 | Charles’s going to loudly show amusement (7) |
| CHUCKLE – sounds like CHUCK’LL | |
| 2 | Number one Scot with puritanical views (9) |
| VICTORIAN – VICTOR(number one), then IAN(Scot) | |
| 3 | What handyman has flipping spoils apparel (7) |
| TOOLKIT – reversal of LOOT(spoils), then KIT(apparel) | |
| 4 | Errant knight in huge trouble (7) |
| UNHINGE – anagram of N(knight),IN,HUGE | |
| 5 | Turned tenacious, holding on (9) |
| DOGLEGGED – DOGGED(tenacious), containing LEG(on, in cricket) | |
| 6 | Stuff’s possibly tax-free, before cuts (7) |
| OVEREAT – if something is tax-free there could be 0 VAT. Insert ERE(before) | |
| 7 | Praise, primarily, to give the thing acclaim? (7) |
|
PLAUDIT – an all-in-one where the whole clue is the wordplay. P |
|
| 12 | One admitted to being unstable? It’s still to be settled (9) |
| LIABILITY – I(one) inside LABILITY(the chemical property of ready reactivity) | |
| 14 | This vicar could be the record-holder (9) |
| ARCHIVIST – anagram of THIS,VICAR | |
| 16 | Complaint received by a miserly sort presenting a threat to workers (3,4) |
| ANT BEAR – the complaint is TB(tuberculosis), inside A, NEAR(miserly) | |
| 17 | Liberal leader gave up splitting wood (7) |
| ASQUITH – QUIT(gave up), inside ASH(wood) | |
| 18 | Light vessel reversed by a kingdom once (7) |
| ASSYRIA – AIRY(light), SS(steamship, vessel) all reversed next to A | |
| 19 | Ruling line in colour, almost ugly (7) |
|
DYNASTY – DY |
|
| 20 | European bank invests — diving in here? (4,3) |
| DEEP END – E(european) inside DEPEND(bank) | |
Edited at 2019-08-08 02:32 am (UTC)
Didn’t realise this until I was reading the blog just now
My time was equal to a very long CD, as I was too lazy to clean and play a record tonight.
Clueless how the science clue worked but loved CARYATID, paying homage to the king of the ad-lib and the double-take.
I think of “lability” as having to do with moods, but I am no chemist.
SEMI seemed to be an &lit, with the hidden word.
My LOI was DOGLEGGED, because the cricket sense of ON was elusive. And I didn’t get the rugby in KNOCK ON THE HEAD at all!
Both “banana” and “ananas” are singular, though the latter is also plural. “Fruit” can be plural, and if we take it as such, BANANAS fits the bill.
I don’t see how thinking of “anana” helps. “Ananas” is the plural of “anana,” but nothing indicates that we must find a plural; “fruit” merely allows the answer to be plural. We needed something to give us the “S,” and it’s irrelevant whether we take “ananas” to be the plural of the rarer “anana” or its own plural.
No solving time to offer as yet again I got stuck with only about a third of the grid completed, however on this occasion I didn’t nod off but made a conscious decision to abandon the task for the night. On resumption this morning the answers came a little more easily.
One time I do have however, is that it was 10 minutes before I could enter my first answer, and then it was only the hidden SEMI at 22ac though I’m pleased to note now that at least I spotted it was hidden.
I used aids for the unknown CARYATID and to unravel the long anagram at 21ac where I had no idea from the definition ‘heady mixture’ what I was looking for. Having failed Chemistry O-level twice I didn’t get the parsing at 12dn of course.
AGITATO is supposed to convey a bit more than ‘hurriedly’ but I suppose in layman’s terms it just about passes muster for crossword purposes.
Edited at 2019-08-08 05:46 am (UTC)
LIABILITY was my last in, and only when I set the letters out flat. I knew labile, but apparently not that it meant unstable – I’d have guessed it meant flexible. We learn.
At 4d, I had the wrong end of the clue for definition, and thought errant only worked if UNHINGED was the answer. Thanks for more careful analysis, George.
The AGIO bit of 13 was yet another known word with a unrecognised meaning. We learn (again)
I was held up considerably by going down the wrong path on 2 clues. I thought that DOGLEGGED was something to do with dog-eared thinking that ‘turned’ was something to do with pages being turned. I also thought that CARYATID was going to end in ED, being a ‘leader in the papers’. At least my satisfaction in finally resolving these made up largely for the annoyance at my error.
Having said that I never saw the hidden SEMI, and dnk lability, but entered the answers happily enough anyway 🙂
On the plus side, I now have a wonderfully mellow Eagles earworm to keep me company though the day. If you need to chill out: Tequila Sunrise – https://youtu.be/bi5ihNyplBs
What held me up was a drink problem (Eagle’s) TEQUILA SUNRISE at 21ac an anagram in plain sight, but….
Some of today’s definitions were iffy. That clue might indeed have read,’Spirit of Cacti, using qualities nurse twisted’ and I’d have been there a tad quicker!!
FOI 14dn ARCHIVIST
LOI 25ac CARYATID there is a nice example of the gals opposite Euston Station, on the Euston Road, near The Friends House.
COD 25ac CARYATID it wasn’t Ulysses but good Old Cary Grant!
WOD 25ac CARYATID
Time – can’t remember that far back.
Edited at 2019-08-08 08:24 am (UTC)
Thanks gl and setter.
Edited at 2019-08-08 10:18 am (UTC)
FOI 8a UNCLOTHING, LOI (without a lot of hope, but apparently with a lot of luck) 13a AGITATO. Now I’ve seen the definition of “agio” it rings a bell, so it may have come up before. (The most recent occurrence here seems to have been a 2014 Mephisto, so perhaps I saw it in the Guardian, or something…)
Enjoyed 25a CARYATID the most.
Biffed UNCLOTHING (didn’t twig “cl”), AGITATO, and LIABILITY. My thanks go George (yet again !)
I spent far too long trying to justify “chortle” at 1D, though I didn’t succumb to entering it.
FOI EPISTLE
LOI EXAM
COD ANT BEAR
TIME 14:21
TEQUILA SUNRISE took ages, despite the fact that it came up in a quiz only last night, and I had the pleasure of seeing the Eagles at Wembley a few weeks ago.
For SEMI I didn’t spot the hidden word, but I do think the ellipsis is misleading and superfluous. CARYATID was my LOI after much head-scratching and alphabet-searching.
I also don’t think prefixes or suffixes standing alone can be answers, as the “a little” sense of SEMI would be.
Edited at 2019-08-08 04:02 pm (UTC)