Definitions underlined.
| Across | |
| 1 | Head of Mafia caught by hired gun, surprisingly — wow! (9) |
| HUMDINGER – first letter (head) of Mafia inside (caught by) an anagram of (surprisingly) HIRED GUN. | |
| 6 | Return extra money — mine! (3) |
| PIT – reversal of (return) TIP (extra money). | |
| 8 | Clerk as unruly, apathetic type (7) |
| SLACKER – anagram of (unruly) CLERK AS. | |
| 9 | Troll taking no medication’s hiding (5) |
| GNOME – hidden in (…’s hiding) takinG NO MEdication. | |
| 10 | Where Romans found ten teams — went crazy (3,9) |
| NEW TESTAMENT – anagram of (crazy) TEN TEAMS WENT. | |
| 12 | Club page complete (6) |
| PUTTER – P (page) and UTTER (complete). | |
| 13 | Respect domicile full of silver (6) |
| HOMAGE – HOME (domicile) surrounding (full of) AG (or Ag, silver in the periodic table). | |
| 16 | Quite, quite twee (6-6) |
| PRETTY-PRETTY – PRETTY (quite) and PRETTY (quite). | |
| 19 | Ring section in modern style (2,3) |
| OP ART – O (ring) and PART (section). | |
| 20 | Communist leader Elizabeth I, perhaps? (7) |
| REDHEAD – RED (communist) and HEAD (leader). | |
| 22 | Hard fruit — one’s cracked! (3) |
| NUT – double/cryptic definition. One who’d cracked might be described as a nut. | |
| 23 | Total when dismissed twice? (3-3-3) |
| OUT-AND-OUT – OUT (dismissed, in cricket) AND OUT (i.e. dismissed twice). | |
|
Down |
|
| 1 | Sound of snake in bath is sinister (4) |
| HISS – hidden in (in) batH IS Sinister. | |
| 2 | A home beneath me, most shabby (7) |
| MEANEST – A NEST (a home) after (beneath, in a down clue) ME. | |
| 3 | Sort fine material, discarding the first (3) |
| ILK – sILK (fine material) missing (discarding) its first letter (the first). | |
| 4 | Loud witch gobbling knight up (6) |
| GARISH – HAG (witch) containing (gobbling) SIR (knight), all reversed (up). | |
| 5 | Large Miro sabotaged: complicated procedure (9) |
| RIGMAROLE – anagram of (sabotaged) LARGE MIRO. | |
| 6 | Call very acidic? (5) |
| PHONE – PH ONE (a substance with a pH of 1 would be very acidic). | |
| 7 | The boards are the best, ultimately for building (7) |
| THEATRE – anagram of (for building) ARE THE and the last letter of (ultimately) best. | |
| 11 | Couple of football teams, this is on the rugby pitch! (6-3) |
| TWENTY-TWO – two football teams would be 22 players, and the 22 is a line on a rugby pitch. | |
| 12 | Lemonade and cheese snack (7) |
| POPCORN – POP (lemonade) and CORN (cheese). DBE + tenuous synonym = comments expected! | |
| 14 | Traced new and old decorative style (3,4) |
| ART DECO – anagram of (new) TRACED then O (old). | |
| 15 | Drink bottle (6) |
| SPIRIT – double definition. | |
| 17 | Rigorous law now repealed? (5) |
| EXACT – EX ACT (law now repealed). | |
| 18 | Change poor diet (4) |
| EDIT – anagram of (poor) DIET. | |
| 21 | Spanish title put on (3) |
| DON -double definition. | |
Edited at 2019-03-27 05:22 am (UTC)
Yes, it is the ‘pop = fizzy drink = e.g. lemonade’ in the clue I was thinking of, not the actual definition. I didn’t know they are ‘allowed’ in the wordplay, and while this one caused me no delay in solving, I do prefer to see them indicated in some way.
Corny = cheesy: that’s how I read it too, but ‘corn’ stood out to me as weird so I looked it up afterwards. It’s there as “old fashioned or hackneyed”, but cheese in this sense isn’t! (Cheesy is). Of course, I may just have the wrong dictionary.
informal The quality of being too obviously sentimental.
‘the conversations tend too far towards cheese’.
Over DBEs in wordplay I can’t find any previous discussions and I’m starting to doubt there are any hard and fast rules, but I seem to remember a consensus that they are not frowned upon in the same way as when they appear as the definition of the whole answer. I’ll have another rummage later.
Edited at 2019-03-27 10:38 am (UTC)
Lots of good stuff. COD to THEATRE for holding out till the end.
David
The “22” is a line on the pitch in rugby 22 metres from the goal line
In Rugby Union it is 22 metres, as Graham says.
As Graham has already said, William, 22 is not a position in rugby but a line painted on the pitch (in my day known as the 25, because it was 25 yards from the goal line … then it went metric at some point).
Very good puzzle, chewy in places, thanks Mara. COD to PHONE, a real chuckle when the penny dropped. Thanks for blogging, William.
Templar
Edited at 2019-03-27 08:23 am (UTC)
Edited at 2019-03-27 09:31 am (UTC)
Had no issue with POPCORN. Nice to see Izetti get a name check at 21D.
FOI HUMDINGER
LOI REDHEAD
COD PHONE
TIME 2:58
Brian
Last few pretty pretty, not plenty plenty which i put in initially, spirit and phone
Really liked popcorn, theatre, pit, putter, hiss, garish, edit but cod definitely to phone.
Dnk op art.
Thanks
About an hour and a half – good for me.
Reading a book on chemistry so brilliant clue for phone. (Did you know PH can be less than 1 or more than 14 – that is just the normal range…)
Took ages over the Romans – was going through buildings and places until the penny dropped
Well done Mara and thanks again for the blog
Nick
I had no problem with POPCORN but did look sideways at HUMDINGER as it didn’t feel like a synonym of wow. In my mind you might say wow if you saw a humdinger e.g. a great drive on the golf course. Not sure I’m much clearer after checking the dictionaries.
Thanks for the blog
Line chorus school song.
A ‘definition by example’ is when the definition part of the clue is merely an example of the answer, e.g. if the definition part of the clue was ‘car’ (an example) and the answer we are supposed to derive from the clue was ‘vehicle’ (the larger group). Note that ‘vehicle’ in the clue to define ‘car’ in the answer is totally uncontroversial.
DBEs were frowned upon during the time when cryptics developed their rules; now less so.
Most of the time, a setter can get around the DBE problem by fairly indicating that the word in the clue is an example of the larger group which is to be entered as the answer, by writing ‘car, perhaps’ or ‘for example, car’, or sometimes just ‘car?’.
Jackkt mentioned above that this convention (no DBE unless fairly indicated) only applies to the word in the clue that provides the definition, which makes sense. In my blog, I had assumed that *any* word in the clue that is supposed to provide a synonym used in the answer, should follow the convention. It seems I am mistaken, and I’m happy to be corrected.
In any case, the rules are there to be broken, and I doubt such conservative conventions are applied in the crosswords of other newspapers. I only mentioned it in anticipation of complaints, not realising I was the only one (sort of) complaining!
There’s a much better explanation of all this here: https://www.crosswordunclued.com/2010/06/definition-by-example.html