I thought this was quite a tricky puzzle because of the surfeit of (to me) unusual vocabulary – there were several answers where I took minutes to figure out and trust the wordplay, but which were no doubt write-ins to other solvers. The fact that two of these unknown answers were clued via anagrams did not increase my enjoyment of the puzzle. No doubt coincidentally, the main cryptic that Saturday also contained a swathe of recondite words.
Solving time: 31m 24s
dd = double definition, * = anagram, cd = cryptic definition, {} = omission
| Across | ||
| 1 | SUBTENANT – SUB-{lieu}TENANT, where “lieu” is a French word for “place” and sub-lieutenant is a junior officer rank | |
| 6 | MACON – MAC ON, i.e. wearing a macintosh, though I’m struggling to see how this passes the substitution test. Wikipedia seems to suggest that Macon is better known for its whites than its reds, but Chambers has: “A heavy red or white burgundy” | |
| 9 | PASSATA – PASTA (typical Italian food) around SA (it) | |
| 13 | AHEAD – HE (man) in A + AD (notice) | |
| 14 | CLEAR UP – dd | |
| 15 | STAIRLIFT – ST (way) + AIRLIFT (how Berlin was once supplied) | |
| 16 | HOT PROPERTY – dd, the first literal | |
| 17 | BELL-BOTTOMS – homophone of BELLE’S (Attractive girl’s) around BOTTOM (part of body) | |
| 18 | UNEVEN – NEVE (mass of ice) inside UN (one in Chamonix, i.e. a French word for “one”) | |
| 19 | UNTOWARD – dd, the first fanciful (i.e. UN-TOWARD) | |
| 21 | EXHUME – EX (old) + HUME (philosopher) | |
| 25 | BEEFED-UP – BEE (Work meeting) + FED UP (bored) | |
| 26 | DOLCE FAR NIENTE – (INDECENT LOAFER)* A strained semi-&lit, “helpfully” incorporating an anagram. An Italian phrase meaning pleasant idleness. I spent ages on this and it was only when I had all the checkers that I had to scrap the assumption that it was an English expression with “for” in the middle. DOLCE then jumped out at me and NIENTE rang a bell. A bit of Googling tells me I would have known this if I’d watched (or, presumably, read) Eat, Pray, Love. | |
| 28 | ADOPT – initial letters of Amusements, Despairing Of Popular Television | |
| 29 | BANANA – BAN (to put a stop to) + ANA (gossip). A reference to a hand of bananas. | |
| 30 | ANTIPODEAN – TIP (recommend) + ODE (poem), inside A + NAN (relative) | |
| 33 | DYER’S BROOM – (MY BORDER SO)* A type of genista, which itself appeared in that day’s main cryptic. Another one that had to wait until all the checkers were in, as I assumed incorrectly it was going to begin with DERBY. | |
| 35 | SWITCH – {atrociou}S + WITCH (speller) | |
| 36 | CRUET – CRU + ET (French words for “wine” and “and”). As an altar boy in my youth, I tend to associate this word with church rather than the dining table. | |
| 38 | NO HARD FEELINGS – dd, the second literal | |
| 40 | PLEASANT – PLEAS (Requests) + ANT (soldier, perhaps) | |
| 42 | ATONAL – ATON{e} (Make up for not finishing) + A + L{ock} | |
| 43 | TRILEMMA – TRI{a}L (Case not a) + EMMA (novel). Similar to a dilemma but with three choices rather than two. | |
| 44 | ADORED – reversal of DERO{n}DA, a reference to the Eliot novel Daniel Deronda. Easier to biff than to derive from wordplay, as there’s no DBE indication plus this is perhaps Eliot’s fifth best-known work, with roughly half the Google hits that even DOLCE FAR NIENTE has. | |
| 47 | AT THE DOUBLE – (LEO + HEADBUTT)* | |
| 50 | SCREENSAVER – SCREEN (Check) + SAVE (but) + R | |
| 52 | MANGANESE – MANGA (Comic book, in particular Japanese and aimed at adults) + SEEN* | |
| 53 | TRIPLET – TT (dry) around RIP{p}LE (ice-cream half-heartedly). I suppose three kids could constitute a “large” family. | |
| 54 | INNIT – reversal of TINNI{tis} | |
| 55 | HEARSAY – EARS (Some corn) in HAY (grass) | |
| 56 | KAYAK – reversal of YAK (beast of burden) + A + K | |
| 57 | AUSTERELY – RELY (Bank) by AUSTE{n} (novelist finally failing) | |
| Down | ||
| 1 | STASH – T inside SASH (ribbon) | |
| 2 | BEEN THERE DONE THAT – (THEATRE THEN BED ONE)* Again, the sense is clear but I’m not sure how this passes the substitution test. | |
| 3 | ENDORSEMENT – (NEED MONSTER)* | |
| 4 | ACCEPT – reversal of PEC (muscle) inside ACT (performance) | |
| 5 | THE BRONX – T{a}X but with the A (area) replaced by HEBRON (Holy Land city). Quite a complex clue for one of the five boroughs of New York. | |
| 6 | MERRY-GO-ROUND – MERRY (drunk) + O inside GROUND (stadium) | |
| 7 | CAPABLANCA – homophone of CAP A BLANKER. A reference to the Cuban widely regarded as one of the greatest chess players of all time. | |
| 8 | NASAL – NASA (Spacemen) + L{ed} | |
| 9 | PLAY BY EAR – PEAR (fruit) around LAYBY (drivers’ rest area) | |
| 10 | STRETCH LIMO – (LET MOST RICH)* | |
| 11 | AMIGO – A + MIG (fighter (aircraft)) + O | |
| 12 | APTEST – {c}AP + TEST (Try) | |
| 18 | UPBRAIDING – PUB* + RAIDING (attacking) | |
| 20 | DEFINITE – DE (the lower classes, in the NRS demographic classification used in the UK) + FINE (sensitive) around IT (sex) | |
| 22 | MONTEZUMA’S REVENGE – cd, referencing the Aztec king who was subjugated by the conquistador Cortes, for the slang expression for traveller’s diarrhoea. As per RP, equivalent to the Tijuana cha-cha, Aztec two-step, etc. | |
| 23 | DURBAR – URBA{n} (of city cut short) inside DR (doctor). A word I didn’t know, defined by a word I didn’t know either – levee in this case means a reception of visitors, rather than an artificial embankment. | |
| 24 | REINSTATED – STATED (said) after REIN (control) | |
| 27 | INDOLENT – IN LENT (before Easter) around DO (party) | |
| 31 | INHALE – IN (Not leaving home?) + HALE (Healthy) | |
| 32 | SWAGGER STICK – WAGGERS (People shaking (!)) in S + TICK (seconds). Chambers: “A short military cane” | |
| 34 | STRANGEWAYS – STAYS (Guys, in the sense of ropes) around RANGE (wander) + W (women’s), for the Manchester prison | |
| 36 | CLANDESTINE – LAND (estate) inside ENTICES* | |
| 37 | DILIGENTLY – GENTLY (Not being forced) after reversal of I + LID (one cover-up) | |
| 39 | FULSOMELY – FULLY (Entirely) around SOME (a few) | |
| 41 | UMBRELLA – hidden in tUMBREL LAdy’s | |
| 45 | WARMTH – WAR (battle) + M (medium) + TH{e} (short article) | |
| 46 | FETTES – F (Fine) + reversal of SETTE{r} (I … shortly), for the public/private school in Edinburgh attended by Tony Blair and James Bond. I knew this because of having the hots for a Fettes alumna when I was at university, but it did make me wonder at what point on the continuum of school famousness do we reach obscurity. | |
| 48 | TONGA – TOGA (Old clothing) around N (new) | |
| 49 | BREAK – dd, the second referring to games such as snooker | |
| 51 | RATTY – dd, the second referring to the character from The Wind in the Willows | |
This gentleman is seen
With a maid of seventeen,
A-taking of his ‘dolce far niente’,
And wonders he’ll achieve
For he asks us to believe
She’s his mother–and he’s over five-and-twenty!
‘Red’ for MACON is a real stretch. The region is known overwhelmingly for its whites, which make up over 90% of production. It would be more appropriate to describe Bordeaux as a white. The Chambers definition is doubly weird as these wines are typically lighter than their equivalents from the Côte d’Or.
Edited at 2015-11-14 12:00 pm (UTC)
I found this tough going all the way through, though for the most part, my unknowns, such as DYER’S BROOM were gettable from wordplay.
Particularly liked THE BRONX for structure.
Edited at 2015-11-15 05:35 am (UTC)