I have to admit that I wasn’t able to write in the answers to this puzzle as quickly as usual, I had to duck and weave around the grid and re-visit a few clues before seeing what was going on. I think it’s at the harder end of the spectrum where Quickies are concerned. Nevertheless it’s a fair puzzle and afterwards I can’t see why it took me nearly fifteen minutes.
| Across |
| 4 |
RACKET – Double definition, if you can overcome the reluctance to equate a racket (as in badminton, tennis, squash) with a bat, as in cricket. I used to hate it when plonkers said to me ‘is that a squash bat or a badminton bat?’ |
| 7 |
BARONAGE – BAR= ban, ON AGE, def. members of the nobility. |
| 8 |
PERMIT – Do ladies still perm their hair? My Mum did, but I never saw the point. Def. allow. |
| 9 |
DEADLINE – A DEAD LINE is an unresponsive phone connection, and a DEADLINE is a time limit. |
| 10 |
ETON – NOTE = see, returned, def. famous public school. Is there a more famous one? |
| 12 |
MOLESKIN – MOLES = undercover spies, KIN = related, def. material. I had some groovy trousers made of this once. |
| 15 |
SOMERSET – (TREE MOST)*, anagrind ‘rampant’, def. part of the West Country. |
| 18 |
MEND – M = first of May, END = finish, def. repair. |
| 20 |
HOPELESS – If you depair more, you hope less; def. bad. |
| 22 |
POTAGE – Reverse E.G. A TOP = say, a first-rate; def. soup. |
| 23 |
RESONATE – (TONES ARE)*, anagrind ‘all around’, def. ring. |
| 24 |
DECIDE – DID E, insert EC = European Community, def. make up their minds? |
| Down |
| 1 |
RATE – CRATE = packing container, has top removed, def. assess. |
| 2 |
CONDENSE – CONE = shape of volcanic mountain, insert DENS = studies, def. concentrate. |
| 3 |
RADIUM – Take the ‘hearts’ of these words; gRADe, sIx, sUMs; get RAD I UM, def. an element. My kind of clue. |
| 4 |
REPEAL – EP = record, old style, insert into REAL = concrete; def. annul. |
| 5 |
CURE – CU = copper, RE = rhenium (a precious metal); def. make better. |
| 6 |
EMISSION – E = European, MISSION = ambassadorial team, def. discharge. |
| 11 |
TROLLOPE – ROLL = run, insert into TO, PE = exercises, T(ROLL)O,PE; def. prolific author. |
| 13 |
ORE – ORE(GON) = NW US state, half gone, def. what’s mined. |
| 14 |
SAMPLING – AMP = amplifier, insert into SLING = pitch, def. modifying bits of music. |
| 16 |
SPHERE – S = small, P = piano, HERE = present, def. area of study. |
| 17 |
TYPIST – T = time, (TIPSY)* anagrind ‘uncoordinated’, def. worker on keyboard. |
| 19 |
TAXI – TAX I = make heavy demand on one, def. hire vehicle. |
| 21 |
SETT – SETT(ER), dog loses ER = hesitation, def. badger den. |
Favourite RADIUM.
A shade over 10 minutes with LOI being predictably 3d.
I particularly liked 17d for its misdirection since “tipsy” would normally indicate an anagrind.
http://feeds.thetimes.co.uk/timescrossword/20150605/5444/
pip
After I noticed it in the paper version, I checked online (exactly the same address as you show) and the clue said (and still does using the link you give) 9 characters. I’m looking at it as I write this: “Tree moss rampant in part of the West Country (9)”.
As I live in Somerset, perhaps they are giving me an extra handicap?
Extract from the XML (or whatever the code is) says
class=”text-title”>15</strong> Tree moss rampant in part of the West Country (8)</div>
Any IT experts around to explain it?
Well, MY HTML says:
< div class=”dmjsClue dmjsClue1 text-clue”>
< strong class=”text-title”>15</strong>
” Tree moss rampant in part of the West Country “
< span class=”clue-format-holder”>(9)< /span>
< /div>
I’ve put a space after all the < so this post doesn’t read the HTML as HTML.
I’m a little out of my depth here…
Edited at 2015-06-05 05:00 pm (UTC)
I am on windows 7 and Chrome?
Busy watching Murray trying to beat the incredible Serb.
I’m using Chrome as well, but I checked it under both Explorer and Firefox: this time it was “8”. So I cleared the cache in Chrome and…it became “8”.
I suspect it originally was “9” but they’d corrected it by the time you looked at it again (probably because they noticed the “9” in the paper version). In the meantime, I was still getting the incorrect version as I was still reading the cached version in my PC rather than it being refreshed.
Well that’s my theory anyway.
Overall a tough test and like others my COD was 3d
I got the right half fairly quickly but stopped for a break with two unsolved -7a and 3d.
I had “bar” plus “on” in 7d; and was convinced that six was VI so was looking for an element ending in “vium”.
Anyway I got there eventually and had to check baronage which was new to me (despite visiting the British Library’s excellent Magna Carta exhibition). David