Solving time: 27 minutes
This offering was a little on the meaty side for a Monday, with some tricky wordplay and some obscure words. Fortunately, these never both occurred in the same clue, enabling me to finish in a reasonalbe time, and to be pretty sure I had the right answers. The four long ones were useful, although only one was a quick write-in for me.
Music: Falla, Three-Cornered Hat, Argenta/Orchestra Nacional de Espana
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | TOPONYMIC, TO PONY + M + I/C, a write-in for classicists. |
| 6 | SAMOA, S + A MOA. |
| 9 | LOCH NESS MONSTER, anagram of CLOSEST MEN + HORNS. This should have been a write-in from the enumeration, but I needed a few letters to see the last word was ‘monster’. |
| 10 | EQUITY, E + QUIT + Y[en], a bit of a chestnut. |
| 11 | NOT A PEEP, NO TAPE + E.P. The Extended Play single does not bulk large in the history of recorded music, but it is mighty handy for puzzle constructors! |
| 13 | ANTIBIOTIC, A + N + TIBI[a] + OTIC, very straightforward. |
| 14 | FOIL, triple definition, and a fine one. |
| 16 | OXEN, O + NEX[t] backwards. |
| 17 | TREASONOUS, T(REASON)O + U.S. I had bunged in ‘traitorous’, but then I read the clue. |
| 19 | OMITTING, O + M(-a,+I)TTING. |
| 20 | LARIAT, L[a] + ARIA + T[raviata]. |
| 23 | INCOMPATIBILITY, anagram of IMPLY + ANTIBIOTIC. I had to put this off until I managed 13, but otherwise not difficult. These very long words fall into a number of simple patterns. |
| 24 | TASTE, TA(S)TE. I don’t know what the compilers would do without The Tate. |
| 25 | DOMINANCE, D([c]OMIN[g])ANCE. |
| Down | |
| 1 | TILDE, TI(L)DE. Not hard if you’ve heard of it. |
| 2 | PICK UP THE PIECES, PICK-UP(THE PIECE)S. I thought this just was a jocular cryptic definition, but there is a genuine cryptic here as well. Maybe a bit of an &lit? |
| 3 | NANOTUBE, NO[w] in an anagram of BUTANE. Fortunately, the word was vaguely familiar. |
| 4 | MUSE, EMUS with the first letter moved to the end. |
| 5 | COMPOSITAE, COMPOS(I TA)E, with a very clear cryptic to help those who had never heard of the family, also known as Asteraceae. |
| 6 | SINBAD, SIN + BAD, apparently, unless I’m missing something. |
| 7 | MATTER OF OPINION, anagram of PAIR OFTEN + MOTION, a write-in for me. |
| 8 | ACROPOLIS, anagram of CAR POOL IS, which I believe has appeared before. |
| 12 | FOUR-IN_HAND, double definition, the second jocular. |
| 13 | APOLOGIST, A + POLO + GIST, my LOI, so not as obvious as you might think. |
| 15 | DONATION, DO + NATION. |
| 18 | STYMIE, STY[-l,+M,I)E. The literal doesn’t reflect the original golf meaning very well, but I wouldn’t expect it to. |
| 21 | THYME, hidden in [homeopa]THY ME[decines], just the sort of ingredient they would use. |
| 22 | FIRM, FIR + M, pine cones, that is! |
I wonder how much longer we will be able to put pen to paper as I now note that The Independent is already gone and W.H.Smith is surely turning into a Thornton’s Chocolate Cabin.
The Times offerings for May were reasonably hard but DNF today’s as I baulked at 5dn. I nearly came a cropper with 12n FOUR IN HAND as I originally put FOUR BY FOUR – a tad too modern mayhap!
FOI 11ac NOT A PEEP
COD 22dn FIRM – well it brightened up my jet lag!
horryd Shanghai
At present it seems the dam’ things can’t even be relied on to spelllcheck.
Edited at 2016-06-06 06:54 am (UTC)
I defer to the masterrrr
Nice Monday-ish puzzle, thanks setter and Vinyl.
Edited at 2016-06-06 04:40 am (UTC)
On edit: I seem to have mombled INCOMBATIBILITY, for which I have no excuse but perhaps a conscientious objection.
Edited at 2016-06-06 01:58 pm (UTC)
I’m intrigued by
mctext describing this as “like a computer-generated puzzle” above – I’m trying to set a crossword right now (hard going because I’m not a natural at that side of things), how do you avoid such roboticness?
Don’t use a computer. Simples.
I’ve (occasionally, when completely baffled, of course) tried those sites which offer to solve clues for you, but beyond filling the gaps, solving the anagrams and searching databases for close (very) copies, their chocolate teapottiness is readily apparent. If that’s true then the initial creation must surely be a step too far for the time being.
Thanks, setter. Thanks vinyl.
DNK COMPOSITAE, even though I’ve bought a couple recently; perhaps they were labelled as Asteraceae. Nevertheless, managed to work it out from the wordplay, along with the unknown FOUR-IN-HAND. TOPONYMIC got from the wordplay helped along a lot by my smattering of Greek, coming together in an “oh, of course that must be it” way.
Happy to have remembered LARIAT from previous crosswords. 13d’s APOLOGIST has definitely come up very similarly clued somewhere recently for me.
A welcome confidence-booster to start the week for this beginner, anyway.
Like sawbill I now have an Average White Band earworm, but as it has displaced a progeny-induced One Direction earworm I am not complaining.
Can an ingredient that is no longer present still be said to be ‘used’?
Edited at 2016-06-06 10:16 am (UTC)
I constructed this from wordplay, and the clue could have said ‘unicorn’ instead of ‘carbon molecule’ without hindering my solve!
Edited at 2016-06-06 12:18 pm (UTC)
I was another who needed to work back from 23ac (got from definition & checkers) to 13ac, and looked for HELP at 11ac.
Put me down as another who was tempted by traitorous.
George Clements
Like others, I wasted time trying to fit one of the Doones (or their enemies) – who used to crop up pretty regularly in the old days – into 1ac, but, when I couldn’t come up with a suitable one, switched to deer. I tend to associate ponies with Dartmoor rather than Exmoor, but then I’m a lot more familiar with the former than the latter.