A puzzle that provided a couple of moments of amusement without proving overly taxing, which is generally how I like them. Perhaps only the card game is not in everyone’s vocabulary, but the wordplay for it is generous and it did appear in these parts back in April so of course everyone will have memorised it then, right??? Don’t disappoint me, people.
The crossword can be found here if the usual channels are unavailable: http://feeds.thetimes.co.uk/timescrossword/20151207/11391/
Definitions are underlined.
| Across |
| 1 |
Maybe no longer climbing past it (4-3-4) |
|
OVER-THE-HILL – literal interpretation, as if you were no longer climbing then you might be “over the hill” |
| 8 |
Country, capital in Lisbon, part of SW Europe (7) |
|
LIBERIA – L (capital in Lisbon, which could be interpreted as either the first letter in “Lisbon” or the capital letter in “Lisbon”) + IBERIA (part of SW Europe). The kind of clue that confuses the heck out of anyone who’s never done a cryptic crossword, as it appears to be indicating Portugal. |
| 9 |
Arabs rebuilt Iraqi city (5) |
|
BASRA – anagram (rebuilt) of ARABS
|
| 10 |
Picked up, too difficult carrying baggage ultimately (9) |
|
OVERHEARD – OVERHARD (too difficult) around (carrying) E (baggage, ultimately, i.e. the last letter of “baggage”). Oddly, Chambers doesn’t have OVERHARD though Collins does – if I was going to use a similar construction, I think I’d probably say “overly hard” rather than “overhard”. |
| 12 |
Garland that is left wrong way round (3) |
|
LEI – reversal (wrong way round) of IE (that is) + L (left) |
| 13 |
Go to bed, having put vase in can (4,2) |
|
TURN IN – URN (vase) in TIN (can) |
| 15 |
Platform at sea sending back young woman I love (3,3) |
|
OIL RIG – reversal (sending back) of GIRL (young woman) + I + O (love) |
| 17 |
Wood in panel, maybe (3) |
|
ELM – hidden (in) in panEL, Maybe |
| 18 |
Biscuit good, a coarse one! (9) |
|
GARIBALDI – G (good) + A + RIBALD (coarse) + I (one). More a Bourbon man, myself. |
| 20 |
A snake – that computes? (5) |
|
ADDER – take your pick as to whether you want to read this as a jocular extended definition or a double definition |
| 22 |
Badly hurt, I’m carrying piano – a great achievement! (7) |
|
TRIUMPH – anagram (Badly) of HURT I’M around (carrying) P (piano). I did laugh at the incongruous image conjured up by the surface. |
| 23 |
Worker with responsibility over another male earning scraps (4,7) |
|
LINE MANAGER – anagram (scraps) of MALE EARNING
|
| Down |
| 1 |
Old card game found in tomb recently (5) |
|
OMBRE – hidden (found) in tOMB REcently. Collins says that this is from the 18th century, but it is still played periodically in modern times in Crosswordland. |
| 2 |
Strangely thin, large human (9) |
|
EARTHLING – anagram (Strangely) of THIN LARGE
|
| 3 |
A British leader entering fancy gate leaves here? (6) |
|
TEABAG – A + B (British leader, i.e. the first letter of “British”), all inside (entering) an anagram (fancy) of GATE, with the definition referring to tea leaves |
| 4 |
Energy brilliant, but starts to decline (3) |
|
EBB – initial letters (starts) of Energy Brilliant But |
| 5 |
Detached ulna is twisted over top of radius (7) |
|
INSULAR – anagram (twisted) of ULNA IS over R (top of radius, i.e. the first letter of “radius”). Sounds painful. |
| 6 |
Star of Bethlehem, for example, revealing an important person (7,5) |
|
LEADING LIGHT – literal interpretation, referring to the story of the Star of Bethlehem leading the kings/wise men/foreigners to Jesus’ birthplace |
| 7 |
Small buzzer in an envied position? (3,2,3,4) |
|
FLY ON THE WALL – kind of a cryptic definition, though the surface reading (no pun intended) doesn’t really help with any misdirection that might otherwise have been present in the word “buzzer” |
| 11 |
Drooling, seeing footballer’s skill? (9) |
|
DRIBBLING – double definition |
| 14 |
A cuckoo coming in dashed fast (7) |
|
RAMADAN – A + MAD (cuckoo) in RAN (dashed). Another surface that made me smile, and a change of religion from the usual fast=Lent equivalence. |
| 16 |
Bitter row, initially, over British school for Frenchman (6) |
|
BRETON – first letters (initially) of Bitter Row, over ETON (British school) |
| 19 |
Primate finding bird with left and right wings? (5) |
|
LEMUR – EMU (bird) with outer letters (wings) of L (left) and R (right). From the Latin word for ghost. |
| 21 |
Unusual alcoholic drink (3) |
|
RUM – double definition |
Thanks for detailed blog though I didn’t need it today since everything parsed.
Brian
Thanks as ever to the bloggers for helping me to wonder how I didn’t instantly see what had been previously completely invisible.
Thought 3d was a very fine clue