ACROSS
1. PIGSTY – ‘dump’ and 6 letters should suggest ‘pigsty’ but not to me; I had to go the long route: it’s GS in PITY.
4. SUGGEST – ‘intimate’ should trigger is it a noun, an adjective or a verb, but not today. One of my last in as I never thought of the verbal sense; the wordplay is as abstruse as it comes, if I am on the right track: SUG (‘celebrated knight getting lost’ ie SUNG without N – knight) + GEST (‘romance’ in its ‘adventure tale’ sense). I reckon the ‘starts’ means that we should be thinking of the GESTE (rather than the GEST) spelling of the word, and should give all the starting letters (but not the ending one)?Thanks to Jack: ‘starts with’ indicates that ‘celebrated knight getting lost’ constitutes the first part of the solution
9. LIANA – I was desperately racking my brain for this word, so I wouldn’t have to get ir from wordplay. I finally managed to. It’s A + NAIL reversed.
10. BARBARIAN – BAR (‘ban’) + IAN (Crosswordland’s sole remaining Caledonian) around BAR (‘pub’).
11. MOUSE HOLE – I still tremble whenever faced by the word ‘Spooner’; this one takes a bit of working out / many crossers + a bit of lifting and separating; HOUSE (‘domestic’) + MOLE (‘animal’) with the first letters swapped to give the ‘damage to skirting board’ sense required.
12. HOURS – no, it’s not Nicole Kidman with the enormous proboscis; it’s the seven times of the day laid down for the recitation of the prayers of the divine office. A hidden answer.
13. CREW – I failed miserably to lift and separate here; the literal is ‘gang’ and the wordplay simply [s]CREW. Tres elegant, oui?
14. OVERSTRESS – OVERS (‘maybe [cricket] maidens’) + TRESS; ‘weight’ as in accent in phonetics.
18. LIGHTER+MAN
20. OPAL – I got into a right tizwaz about this one too; O (in front of, AKA ‘on the western edge of’ in an across clue) + PAL. Another elegant clue.
23. PANDA – this type of clue always does for me; it’s P AND A, P & A being the two letters that make ‘dad’ appear. Boom, boom, as Baldrick might put it (with endless repetitions). On edit: Apparently, some are unaware of the work of one of our finest war poets, S. Baldrick. Here he is reading ‘The German guns’
25. FARRAGOES – the first of a few tricky ones at the end of the acrosses; ‘motley collections’ (you can spell the plural –os or –oes, which is handy if you are Dan Quayle); RAG in FAROES, whose football stadium is not a happy hunting ground for the land of Ians.
25. SLEIGHING – SLING (‘shy’ as in ‘throw’) around EIGH[t] .
26. HIPPO – HIP + PO for Saint Augustine (the fifth century hell-raiser turned church father, best known for his Confessions and his City of God).
27. HELOTRY – this can mean ‘serfs or slaves as a class’ as well as ‘serfdom, slavery’; provided here by HE[n]RY around LOT.
28. SPIRIT – IR in SPIT.
DOWN
1. POLEMICAL – POLE + CLAIM* (anagram).
2. GRANULE – a bit of a weird surface, this, to derive ‘a tiny bit’; it’s GRAN + [y]ULE.
3. THAMES – I was trying to fit Strand in. A nice little cryptic definition.
4. SPREE – PR (‘pair’) in SEE ‘observe’); that’s easy enough but, unless you are a German, ‘Spree’ does not suggest itself as the most likely ‘flower’. But then, just the other day I learned courtesy of a George MacDonald novel that there are rivers called both Avre and Arve in France, so one lives and learns.
5. GRAPHITE – HIT in GRAPE.
6. EPICURE – E + PIC[t]URE for the food buff/bluff.
7. TUNIS – I (‘island’) in TUNS.
8. ABSOLVER – A + B + SOLVER; setters get a bit of a kick out of calling us ‘you’ or more rarely, as here, ‘solvers’, while reserving ‘setter’ and ‘I’, ‘me’ + derivatives for themselves.
15. ROAD RAGE – RAG (‘paper’) in ADORE*.
16. SPLASH OUT – SPOUT around LASH.
17. STRAIGHT – ‘straits’ are dire difficulties, so ‘strait’ might be one of them.
19. GENTEEL – a very rarely used word these days – ‘affectedly polite’; GENT + [f]EEL.
21. PROSPER – P in PROSE (‘writing’) + R (‘reading at school’ – coz it’s one of the 3 Rs).
22. WASH UP – ‘had little husband got out of bed?’ = ‘was h[usband] up?’; I’m getting a real work-out this morning.
23. PASCH – an old word for Passover or Easter; PAS (as in ‘de deux’) + CH.
24. FAIRY– a tricky little one to finish; F (‘female’) + AIRY (‘delicate’) for a sort of all-in-one; Collins has the second adjectival sense of ‘fairy’ as ‘resembling a fairy or fairies, esp in being enchanted or delicate’.
My solving usually goes downhill from Monday onwards, so this could be a long week. Or perhaps it’s a reversal of the trend. We’ll see.
I’m trying to avoid the excuse of feeling absolutely miserable health-wise, but if you search for “Manflu – the truth” on youtube you’ll get some idea of what I’m going through. Brutal.
Wonder if the ALEMAN was deliberate??
Hope galspray gets better soon.
Edited at 2014-09-01 04:58 am (UTC)
I wondered whether I would ever get started on this and took the best part of 4 minutes to write in my first answer, OPAL, at 20ac. After that I made fairly steady progress but still required 55 in all to complete the grid with the last 10 spent on PASCH (never heard of it but eventually decided it had to be, based on ‘Paschal’ which I did know) and HELOTRY (where I had LOT early but the heartless king eluded me for too long).
I don’t know why the SPREE, the river on which Berlin stands, should be less familiar than the Seine in Paris or the THAMES in London but for some reason it is. HIPPO was easy to solve but not to parse without specific and somewhat arcane GK. Having looked it up later I’ve a horrid feeling that a very similar clue appeared here before, not that long ago, and I didn’t know it then either.
Did Baldric really say ‘boom boom’? I thought that was Basil Brush.
Edited at 2014-09-01 05:41 am (UTC)
At 12A I assumed “of prayer” was padding, not being familiar with longer definition. Knew nothing of HIPPO. I’m not sure 28A works – how does being in the middle of a spit of rain create a shelter?
Once again the damned iPad software caused me a big problem by obscuring a letter in a clue. This time it was the last letter of the word ‘celebrated’ in 4ac, so I spent ages trying to come up with a word that would fit SIG_E_T.
All in all a bit of a harrumph from me this morning.
Female = F
that’s = ‘that has’ [next to it]
delicate = AIRY
Definition: ‘female that’s delicate’ = FAIRY (noun).
Not sure how FRAIL works!
But I was thinking of Oberon.
And in response to anon who suggested FRAIL, as far as I’m aware there’s no rule that there can’t be alternative and valid answers to a clue so long they can be distinguished by checked letters, in which case FRAIL falls by the wayside on this occasion and no carelessness is involved
All correct in about an hour or so, but with several unknowns (SPREE, PASCH, HELOTRY, GEST, HIPPO, FARRAGOES) forcing me to put my trust in the cryptics. Finished in the SW with the crossing of two of the unknowns.
My error was to write GLOBULE for 2, thinking a ‘glob’ might some slang word for a narrative (relation). As I struggled to think of a climber, L_O_A, I saw my error.
So my worst effort for a long time – roll on tomorrow!
For the latter, having decided I was looking for a known unknown, I almost went for HELOTOD with Herod the eponymous king.
Tricky for a Monday I thought.
We all have esoterica in out GK and vocab, I suppose. The weirder bits of this one were all matched by my collection, so just lucky? Certainly fortunate to have all the checkers in place for FAIRY: I’m inclined to agree that FRAIL is very seductive. As a noun, I’d have put it firmly in Sam Spade territory.
I like Spoonerisms, so my foi was the HOUSE MOLE, although I wasn’t confident enough to write it in boldly.
Good, if slow start to the week. Thanks blogger for helping with the mystery parsing.
Despite that, I enjoyed this slightly more crunchy Monday offering.
PS How can a guy (one of us?) be at the same time The Times Crossword Champion and The Times Sudoku Champion? Awesome!
My mistake.
No complaints about the puzzle itself though.