I’m not sure why I needed 51 minutes to complete this one as on reflection some of the clues that might not have been out of place in a QC. However things usually seem much easier with hindsight.
As usual definitions are underlined in bold italics, {deletions and substitutions are in curly brackets} and [anagrinds, containment, reversal and other indicators in square ones]
| Across | |
| 1 | Beat victim, a sucker (7) |
| LAMPREY – LAM (beat), PREY (victim) | |
| 5 | Bird initially makes a sound like a crow (5) |
| MACAW – M{akes} [initially}, A, CAW (sound like a crow) | |
| 9 | Martyr’s vestment some snipped (5) |
| ALBAN – ALB (vestment), AN{y} (some) [snipped]. The first English Christian martyr whose birthplace, Verulamium, was later named St Albans in his honour. | |
| 10 | Barred character quietly sounding off (5,4) |
| POUND SIGN – P (quietly), anagram [off] of SOUNDING. A slightly off-beat definition unless I’m missing something, but there is undoubtedly a horizontal line in the £ sign. On edit: Thanks to vinyl1 and Kevin for pointing out that the setter could be referring to # , what I would call the ‘hash’ sign. I’ve never ever come across it as a pound (lb) sign before and according to Wiki (and confirmed in Chambers) this usage is US and Canadian. I might have suggested that if this is what the setter intended it should have been referenced in the clue as is so often the case when an alternative US usage or spelling is required (we had LITER for LITRE only a few days ago) but as was pointed out to me here in no uncertain terms very recently, it’s not the job of setters to make life too easy for us. In any case it didn’t really affect my solving of the clue and on a non-blogging day it would have caused only the mildest of MERs. Edit on edit: I’ve made a further edit to reflect the dissent in the ranks that # was what the setter probably intended; needless to say I’m all for that as it means my original interpretation was correct all along. | |
| 11 | Truly, not large plant (7) |
| HONESTY – HONEST{l}Y (truly) [not large]. Aka lunaria annua. | |
| 12 | Some witches’ death here in question (2,5) |
| AT STAKE – Two meanings | |
| 13 | I get friend to move to such an improved area? (10) |
| GENTRIFIED – Anagram [move] of I GET FRIEND. Collins defines ‘gentrification’ as: ‘a process by which middle-class people take up residence in a traditionally working-class area of a city, changing the character of the area’. Whether this is necessarily an improvement as the clue suggests may be open to question, but it certainly raises the value of property there. | |
| 15 | Water that’s French, European — and English (4) |
| MERE – MER (water that’s French), E (European). The definition refers back to the first word in the clue as demonstrated in the English lake district which has some 4 ‘meres’ and 13 ‘waters’ in the names of its components. Helped by the answer having turned up as the definition of ‘pool’ in yesterday’s puzzle. | |
| 18 | Deeply involved, up to this kiss (4) |
| NECK – Two meanings | |
| 20 | Sort of mass fiction troubled friend consumes (10) |
| PONTIFICAL – PAL (friend) contains [consumes] anagram [troubled] of FICTION. Collins defines ‘Pontifical Mass’ as: ‘a solemn celebration of Mass by a bishop’. I wasn’t aware of it as such but I do know the Pope is referred to as ‘The Pontiff’ so the answer came easily enough. | |
| 23 | Cause of trouble, a single place to enter craft (7) |
| BIPLANE – 1 PL (a single place) is contained by [to enter] BANE (cause of trouble) | |
| 24 | Teased with more intensity after injury (5,2) |
| WOUND UP – WOUND (injury), UP [with more intensity] | |
| 25 | Fluorescent tubes trip out: insulting (9) |
| SLIGHTING – S{trip} LIGHTING (fluorescent tubes) [trip out] | |
| 26 | Some hair a persistent pain on end of foot (5) |
| TACHE – {foo}T [end], ACHE (persistent pain) | |
| 27 | Cold meat free of fat, and sterile (5) |
| CLEAN – C (cold), LEAN [meat free of fat] | |
| 28 | Cruel daughter died, one strangled with both hands (7) |
| GONERIL – GONE (died), then I (one) contained by [strangled with] L R (both hands). Ref King Lear by today’s Birthday Boy. | |
| Down | |
| 1 | Rely on eating British far from home here (7) |
| LEBANON – LEAN (rely) + ON containing [eating] B (British). The definition refers back to ‘British’. | |
| 2 | Truth, for Blair, was one error I’m about to test (8) |
| MINISTRY – SIN (error) + I’M reversed [about], TRY (test). Eric Blair’s (George Orwell’s) 1984 featured a Ministry of Truth. | |
| 3 | Come back to put penny in bank (5) |
| REPLY – P (penny) contained by [in] RELY (bank) | |
| 4 | Anything or nothing may unite, alternatively (3,4,2) |
| YOU NAME IT – Anagram [alternatively] of 0 (nothing) MAY UNITE | |
| 5 | Unpretentious metre: poem is on the way (6) |
| MODEST – M (metre), ODE (poem), ST (way) | |
| 6 | Double bend suggests trickery, with line removed (7) |
| CHICANE – CHICANE{ry} (trickery) [with line – ry/railway – removed] | |
| 7 | Secure ends of cable and start back (5) |
| WINCE – WIN (secure), C{abl}E [ends]. Collins has: ‘to start slightly, as with sudden pain; flinch’ | |
| 8 | Way melon can make one sick (8) |
| PATHOGEN – PATH (way), OGEN (melon). An agent that causes disease. | |
| 14 | Blooming stumping we got for a duck (9) |
| FLOWERING – FLO0RING (stumping) gives us the answer when WE is substituted for 0 (a duck) | |
| 16 | Put notice up about parts of film that are regularly over our heads (8) |
| ECLIPSES – SEE (notice) reversed [put…up] containing [about] CLIPS (parts of film) | |
| 17 | A bet makes one nervous (8) |
| AFLUTTER – A, FLUTTER (bet) | |
| 19 | EU subsidy applied to Asian crop? Fancy! (7) |
| CAPRICE – CAP (EU subsidy – Common Agricultural Policy), RICE (Asian crop) | |
| 21 | An appendix to one’s Old Testament? (7) |
| CODICIL – A barely cryptic clue for a supplementary addition to a previous Will (old testament) | |
| 22 | Realise murderer is keeping quiet (4,2) |
| CASH IN – CAIN (murderer) containing [keeping] SH (quiet) | |
| 23 | Plain is one, in degrees Celsius (5) |
| BASIC – I (one) contained by [in] BA’S (degrees) + C (Celsius) | |
| 24 | Joker riding cart (5) |
| WAGON – WAG (joker), ON (riding) | |
And I noticed not only was MACAW also in today’s concise, it was in exactly the same spot, 5ac.
I would suggest that the ‘pound sign’ refers to ‘#’: “The symbol # is most commonly known as the number sign, hash, or pound sign.”
Edited at 2019-04-23 02:47 am (UTC)
I don’t believe it’s a coincidence that # and £ map to the same physical keyboard key for different languages; I imagine it’s a side-effect of the early days of the internationalisation of ASCII codes, where we were all trying to cram our important characters into just 128 slots and ran out of room. An early fudge for this was character sets where the letters were mostly represented by the same numbers, but in America you’d get a “#” and in the UK you’d get a “£”.
These days we’re a bit more advanced along the road, and the various Unicode encodings allow for hundreds of thousands of characters, from Aramaic to, er, modern hieroglyphs 😀😎🤡, but our keyboards still don’t have that many keys. Even today, on a UK Apple Mac it’s Shift+3 for “£” and Option+3 for “#”…
Edited at 2019-04-23 09:22 am (UTC)
It is correlation – though an accidental one. The US has always referred to the hash symbol as a pound sign. The current international ISO keyboard layout was designed in the US. The programmer was, apparently, asked to put the UK pound sign on the three key, next to the dollar sign. He put the US pound sign there instead. That’s why the US and UK keyboard layouts differ (now in other ways too).
Only vaguely knew where I was with the ALBAN clue, where my first effort was URBAN — probably a martyr and, you know, a turban with a bit snipped — and the exciting prospect of an ‘urban gentrification’ nina.
Liked the TACHE, the NECK and the wordplay of SLIGHTING, even if the surface is distinctly iffy.
The defs. for MINISTRY (good surface too) and ECLIPSES were my highlights.
Finished in 42 minutes.
Thank you to setter and blogger
Not being American didn’t slow me down in 10a POUND SIGN, though it seemed quite a loose definition for “£” when I wrote it in.
Apart from that, I enjoyed some of the nicer sleight of hand here. COD to 21d for its Old Testament, plus I liked 23d’s “degrees Celsius” and 2d’s “Truth, for Blair”. On the whole, chewy but enjoyable.
I’m fairly sure the setter must have been thinking of £, but it also works with # so 🤷
Edited at 2019-04-23 10:19 am (UTC)
COD to MERE for a neat clue for such a short word.
Knew the # for £ so no problem there. Enjoyed “old testament” and “degrees Celsius”. Well done Jack and thank you setter
And 5 of that was trying to justify Mere. Sometimes excessive subtlety negates itself, like winking with both eyes.
Thanks setter and J.
Agree with Keriothe, there’s no need to consider # when £ will suffice. In fact if I thought # really was meant, I would be complaining.
And I’m biased on St Alban too: my school’s twice weekly assemblies were held within feet of his shrine in the fabulous multi-styled abbey-cathedral that bears his name. Do visit. Alban has much more claim to be Britain’s patron saint that today’s George: the first Christian martyr in this land of immigrants: a Roman settled in Britain, who sacrificed his life to save another. Much more authentic than that Turkish parvenu responsible (at least in part) for the extinction of the draco species.
Be that as it may, this crossword took me 17 minutes, the last in the rather clever (by which I mean tricky to sort out) MERE. Much enjoyed, especially in tandem with an excellent blog.
The Times is an English crossword, and in English English POUND SIGN invariably means £, which is a character with a bar (and sometimes two). I don’t see any need for #.
Edited at 2019-04-23 08:05 am (UTC)
I knew CHICANE from Scalextric, there was a special piece which made the cars crash.
The sharp sign did not cross my mind.
Have worn an alb.
And I knew 1ac from the fatal surfeit thereof.
Thanks to Look and Learn for all the above.
24′, thanks jack and setter.
FOI HONESTY
LOI CHICANE
COD CODICIL
TIME 12:00
PONTIFICAL is a rum one. I very much enjoyed the definition, surface and cryptic elements, but the grammar is pretty tenuous: “fiction troubled friend consumes” to mean “friend consumes troubled fiction” may just about pass muster but isn’t very pleasing.
I’m also not sure about the definition in 8d – surely needs a “this can…” or similar?
Sorry, all in all I thought this was a good puzzle but those brought it short of excellence for me.
I don’t like definitions that are “almost, but not quite” the right part of speech to match the answer and this had two of the blighters (“can make one sick” and “that are regularly over our heads”).
Secondly, IMHO the clue for MERE doesn’t fully work. It doesn’t pass muster as an &Lit in which case “water” is doing double duty as part of both wordplay and def.
My grumpiness (further aggravated by the fortunes of Leeds United over the weekend) and struggles with MERE and ECLIPSES at the end (for the reasons noted above) meant my time stretched to 22:33 for a puzzle that wasn’t really that hard.
Edit to add that I only thought of £ and not # for 10 despite having participated in countless wretched conference calls where one’s conference ID number has to be followed by the “pound or hash sign”.
Edited at 2019-04-23 12:23 pm (UTC)
Rice as an Asian crop? With no indication of DBE?
Apart from Antarctica (where there’s not much farming), rice is grown in every single continent in the world. What’s with “Asian”? It’s like white people wearing blackface, odious racial stereotyping.
I live in Australia, and we export rice to Asia.
LOI was POUND SIGN; I completely missed the anagram but, to me, it is clearly a barred character.Before that I struggled in the NE. WINCE seemed likely to be right but I was looking for something better and 2LOI was CHICANE.
Quite a few I could not parse ( especially MINISTRY) so thanks for all those.
A recent visit to St Albans was my saving grace for 2a.
David
For no particular reason this took me about 40 minutes, having got stuck halfway for a while: MERE was LOI.
Thanks for the grid, clues and blogging exegesis – much appreciated for several biffers, 25 being the main one. LOI was 26 which is odd as it’s so easy. Mind you, aren’t they all when you know how they work?
Perhaps this will get easier. I’ve just ordered Ximenes and Chambers Crossword Manual, perhaps they will help. At least I’m getting through them, albeit with dictionary help.
3 month challenge: 4/6
It was, therefore, in deep grumpth that I decided I was damned if I was going to check my answers before submitting. This, in turn, led to my being yet further engrumpthed by having a typo in CODICIL. I’m sure it serves me right, which makes me grumpier still.
Thanks to jackkt for explaining 9ac, which I completely failed to parse. I’m pretty sure I’ve never heard of an alb, and would have guessed it was one of the innumerable juvenile stages of the salmon, if pressed.
As for # being a pound sign, I’ve always assumed that when automated phone services tell me to “press the pound sign”, it’s my phone that’s deficient in having a # where a £ is needed. A Google image search for “pound sign” returns about 20 times more £s than #s. However, I’m sure that if I start ranting about American usage, someone will point to evidence that # for “pound” is of English origin.
I am hoping that the remaining 23 minutes of Tuesday turn out better than the previous 1417 have.
Found this one to be quite heavy going and did need to use references along the way – to check if there was a martyr ALBAN, the plant HONESTY and the PONTIFICAL mass. Assumed that the pound sign was the crossed monetary one – didn’t really matter at the end of the day – as long as one arrived at the answer I guess.
Interesting to see PATHOGEN, whilst doing the puzzle in semi-lockdown with the latest version of it.
Finished in the NW corner with GENTRIFIED, YOU NAME IT (originally had YOU HAVE IT – but couldn’t parse it) and MINISTRY (thought originally that it was the Tony Blair version until penny-dropping the real name of George Orwell)