13:04 on the club timer. While that’s obviously not the sort of time which would make me feel lightning fast on most daily puzzles, the uncrowded leaderboard so far suggests I was definitely on the right wavelength for this one (several familiar on-line solvers have also made a mistake, so we may find out if there is one clue in particular which has tripped lots of people up;
). More importantly, I thought this was an elegant puzzle, where any gaps in my knowledge were filled perfectly fairly by the wordplay.
| Across |
| 1 |
CHAMPAGNE – CHAMP, [Norway in AGE]. |
| 6 |
OILER – reverse hidden answer in awaRE LIOn’s; I knew OILER as a ship which carries oil, but not this definition, though it wasn’t a great leap, especially as the type of clue is well signposted. |
| 9 |
IN BUD – IN(=popular) BUDE. Very tempting to write IN BED into those checkers without thinking, I wonder if this is where those errors came from? |
| 10 |
UNDEFINED – UNDER without Runs, FINED(=given punishment). |
| 11 |
BEEHIVE – cryptic def. Luckily there isn’t a hairstyle called an “anthill”. |
| 12 |
SIRLOIN – [Right, Left, OI!] in SIN. |
| 13 |
GOOSEBERRY BUSH – cryptic def., the place where babies were traditionally discovered in a time of euphemism. Possibly left there by a stork. |
| 17 |
PRESENT PERFECT – PRESENT(=here), (REP)rev., as in repertory theatre company, EC(=city) in FT(=appropriate newspaper for the City). To be technical, the tense of a verb which is used to to express a past event as something which still pertains in the present (“I have been solving crosswords for longer than I care to remember”); informally, the football pundit’s tense: “Let’s see that replay, Ron”. “Yes, Tony, Gazza’s knocked it into the channel, and the boy Lineker’s made a good run and absolutely smashed it home, near post.” |
| 21 |
ASSUAGE – (US)rev. in A SAGE |
| 23 |
GINSENG – [N,S, EN(French for “in”)] inside GIG. A small rowing-boat as well as one of the numerous horse-drawn carriages which regularly appear in Crosswordland. |
| 25 |
PRIMITIVE – PRIM, [Versus in 1 TIE]. Someone who is not very developed, hence naive. |
| 26 |
SCUBA – Son, CUBA. |
| 27 |
ROGUE – Garden in ROUE. I didn’t know the horticultural definition, but again the wordplay makes it an easy leap. Nice surface. |
| 28 |
RED CARPET – REDCAR(racecourse in the NE of England), PET(=favourite). |
| |
| Down |
| 1 |
CRIBBAGE – [RIB(=bar), Boozers] in CAGE. |
| 2 |
AMBLE – Mark in ABLE. |
| 3 |
PODGINESS – POD(=school, as in a gathering of marine creatures), (PRESSING)* without the PR. |
| 4 |
GRUYERE – counteR in GUY, rEtRiEd. |
| 5 |
END USER – (RUDENESS)*. |
| 6 |
OFFER – OFF(=cancelled), E.R. The epitome of concise clueing. |
| 7 |
LANGOUSTE – [Good, OUST] in LANE. I knew langoustine because I’ve eaten a few in my time, but not this similar shellfish, though once more I was pretty confident from the wordplay. |
| 8 |
RODENT – DEN in ROT. |
| 14 |
ONRUSHING – ON(=further), R.U.(=game), SHINGLE minus the last two letters. |
| 15 |
BERING SEA =”BEARING SEE”, where “court=see” in the romantic sense. I checked my memory extra carefully for the spelling of BERING, making sure I didn’t confuse it with the Barents Sea (both cold and Northern, but a long way apart). |
| 16 |
STAGNANT – [TAG(=label)in Sn(=tin, chemically)], ANT(=soldier). |
| 18 |
NEEDIER – KNEE, DIYER minus the Year. |
| 19 |
PIGFEED – [Good, Fe(iron, chemically)] in PIED(=”in two colours”). |
| 20 |
JASPER – JA(=German for “yes”) + (REPS)rev. |
| 22 |
ABIDE – BID in A&E. What was once “Casualty” is now “Accident and Emergency”. |
| 24 |
EQUIP – Ecstasy + QUIP(=crack). Another concise clue with a great surface. |
Interesting Tim that you see a connection between “shooting” and “in bed” – you’ve clearly led a colourful life!
There was a young lady from Bude
Who went for a swim in the lake …
Etc.
At 23ac, I hadn’t heard of GIG as a boat, though N and S had to be in there somewhere. An equal unknown was ROGUE for ‘diseased plant’ at 27ac. And, post-solve, I find it’s a bit loose: “an inferior or defective specimen among many satisfactory ones, esp. a seedling or plant deviating from the standard variety” (NOAD). Watch out: it can also be a verb meaning to remove such plants.
12ac: OI for ‘look here’ — come on!
In the Down clues, despite being a CRIBBAGE tragic, it was hard to find that ‘bar’ meant RIB. And the dubious homophone at 15dn was cringeworthy. AE for ‘accident and emergency’ (casualty) also took a bit of seeing (22dn). And ‘DIY-er’ (18dn) is a word outwith my vocab.
13ac may be one of the few (just) passable cryptic defs of recent times. Though I’m sure that old wives know very well where babies come from!
Edited at 2013-09-10 10:06 am (UTC)
I suspect that the mistake some online solvers may have made is to have put “pudginess” at 3dn. It was my LOI and I flirted with it myself before I parsed the clue properly and went for the correct PODGINESS.
I didn’t know that definition of ROGUE but the wordplay was clear enough.
I did find this pretty easy apart from several minutes to spot and parse PRIMITIVE at the end. 17:13 on the clock, but…
I was one of the one-mistakers with an inexplicable PUDGINESS at 3d. The more inexplicable because the the text window I use as a scratchpad is still open this morning and the word PODGINESS is still there from where I worked out the clue last night. Curiously, I’m typing this comment in that same Textedit window on my Mac and the auto-spellchecker is red-lining PODGINESS but is quite happy with PUDGINESS. Go figure, as the people who coded the spellchecker would very likely say.
Never heard of gooseberry bush in this connection.
Edited at 2013-09-10 09:44 am (UTC)
I guess you would say, not my wavelength at all. Funny, that.
I, on the other hand, bunged in the invented BARENT SEA and failed utterly to reconsider the spelling when “correcting” to BARING SEA.
PRIMITIVE was my last in and took ages to see. I didn’t have a clue about GOOSEBERRY BUSH but it seemed the only possible option.
22m after all that. Not my finest solve.
Funny old world.
However I feel the need to comment on “Odd job man” = DIY-er. For me these two are anything but the same. An odd job MAN seems by definition someone who is paid to do other people’s odd job’s….whereas a DIY-er (assuming the word exists) is surely someone who does their own jobs, rather than getting someone in.
I’m probably being picky as in the end the clue was easy to solve and I could see what the setter was getting at, but I’ve seen similar issues (e.g. pluck vs strum) spark debate on here in the past, so am surprised it hasn’t raised any eyebrows.
Dave B
On the other hand, I guess it works OK if you think of a DIY-er as “someone who does odd jobs around the house”. And as you say, the ultimate test in such cases has to be “Does this stop anyone solving the clue?” though this shouldn’t (and obviously doesn’t) preclude comment.
Besides, if you can’t be picky about language here, then where can you be?
George Clements
I both solved this on my iPad and am responding via the iPad to the blog.
In other words, you’ve probably just been unlucky.
Edited at 2013-09-10 05:04 pm (UTC)
My LOI was 22d, as I couldn’t see where FIR could come from, to make the tender stomach AFIRE. Eventually I had to resort to Word Matcher to see if there was some other A>E word that I’d missed !
All others ok, but couldn’t parse SIRLOIN (thinking ‘lo’ was see, couldn’t work out IR for both hands) or the tense (thought ‘by’ gave the ‘per’ bit of ‘PERFECT’, so had too much clue!), so thanks for those.
Regards,
George Clements