I’m posting this on Dave Perry’s behalf as he’s currently on a beach in Greece.
Time: 1:15:09 according to the official timer, but I spent about 20 minutes looking at a paper copy before I started, so probably more like an hour and a half in total.
I needed aids to finish off a couple at the end – NEMATODE & TIPPET, and I don’t think I could have got them otherwise, no matter how long I spent on them. All my other comments, I’ve made against the individual clues. I may have been a bit picky in places, so sorry about that.
cd = cryptic def., dd = double def., rev = reversal, homophones are written in quotes, anagrams as (–)*, and removals like this
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | BROAD’S WORD |
| 6 | OSSIFICATION = (I’S + SO) rev + FICTION about A |
| 14 | OR + A + T(O)RIOS – a trio being a musical work for a group of three musicians, as well as the group itself |
| 15 | A + GATE – the dictionary lists under ‘gate’: North England and Scot. habitual manner or way of acting. |
| 16 |
|
| 17 | DRIVE A HARD BARGAIN = (HARD + BAR) in (VERDI)* + AGAIN – ‘bit’ = BAR as in the metal bar that goes in a horse’s mouth, I assume |
| 18 | O(BE)AH |
| 19 | TA + MP + I + ON – A muzzle or plug for a gun, usually artillery. I didn’t know the word, and ‘after’ = ON had me confused for a while, but the etymology is the same as for tampon, a more familiar plug, so it wasn’t much of a stretch. |
| 21 | MO + T + O(W)N – ‘leg’ = ON in the cricketing sense |
| 22 | PEDESTAL – it took me an age to parse this. I think it’s PL (platoon) about E (a quarter) + DES (of the French) + TA (army). I’ve not come across PL as an abbreviation for platoon before, so I wasn’t expecting it, and I don’t like ‘the’ in ‘of the French’ – I doesn’t seem to serve any purpose. It is misleading, if not wrong, in the wordplay, and adds nothing to the surface. I thought ‘a quarter of the French’ was going to be EST for a while and was trying to justify ‘platoon’ = PEDAL somehow. |
| 24 | EELPOUT = “‘E’LL POUT” – Another obscure word, this one is a fish. |
| 26 | SO(C(I)AB)LE |
| 27 | TRITON = “TRY” + TO + N – The largest (by far) of Neptune’s 13 moons. In fact it has about 300 times the mass of all the other 12 put together. It’s also notable for being the only significant moon in the solar system to have a retrograde orbit, i.e. one that goes in the opposite direction to that of the planet’s rotation. |
| 30 | MAINTOPSAIL = MA + IN + (AS PILOT)* |
| 32 | KITCHENWARE = (RACKET WHEN I)* |
| 33 | S + TICKLE + BACK – apparently if you reach in to the water and stroke a trout gently on the belly, it goes into a sort of trance allowing you to easily scoop it up. This was a technique often used by poachers. I remember reading this as a lad in Roald Dahl’s Danny the Champion of the World, and it clearly stuck with me. |
| 35 | BRAIN-TEASER = RE removed from BRAINTREE + AS + ER. I’m originally from Essex, so the town of Braintree was quite familiar to me, but I can imagine that others, particularly overseas solvers, might have a little more trouble. |
| 37 | R(AD)IAL – The Rial being the unit of currency in Iran. Ready as a slang term for cash is quite a common device in these crosswords. |
| 38 | NEMATODE = (MADE NOTE)* – another obscurity and a poor clue, I thought. The consonants could go in pretty much any order, so if you don’t know this fairly uncommon word, you’re a bit stuck. |
| 39 | CHEKHOV = “CHEQUE OFF” – Uncle Vanya being a play by Anton Chekhov |
| 42 |
|
| 44 | CITRON = “SIT” + R |
| 46 | PROSPER |
| 48 | BATIK = KIT + AB all rev – A traditional method of textile decoration from Java. I didn’t know the word, but the wordplay was clear enough. |
| 49 | LAUGH UP ONE’S SLEEVE – dd |
| 51 | AGELESS = (E + LEG) rev in ASS |
| 52 | S(WED)E – I didn’t know the playwright, but the wordplay made it obvious |
| 53 | GUATEMALA = A + LA + MET + AUG all rev |
| 54 | DI(LETT + ANTI)SH – Lett being an archaic word for Latvian |
| 55 | INVESTMENT – dd, the second of which is listed as rare |
| Down | |
| 1 | BLOODSTREAM = (MODEL BOATS)* about R |
| 2 | OK + A + PI |
| 3 | DUO(DEC I)MO – this had me stuck for a while, but as soon as I realised that ‘start of last month’ was going to be DECI rather than just D, the rest came straight away. |
| 4 | WEIGH-IN = “WAY-IN”, although my first thought when I read the clue was about shorts! |
| 5 | ROSTRUM = OR rev + STRUM |
| 7 | S + PAR(ROW + HAW)K – the definition being ‘it predates’ or acts as a predator. |
| 8 | ICE-CAP = I.E. + CAP about |
| 9 | INLANDER = ISLANDER with N for S – with no checker for the second letter, I had to think carefully about which word was required. Some may slip up here. |
| 10 | ANA + TO + LE + FRANCE – Ana for ‘stories’ has cropped up several times before, but I didn’t particularly like ‘article’ for LE. The setter seems to be relying on its meer proximity to the word FRANCE to imply that it’s in french which seems a bit of a stretch. |
| 11 | INSPECT = INSECT about |
| 12 | NON-CH(A + L)ANCE – Is non-chance a real term for no accident? I couldn’t find it listed anywhere. And ‘no’ = NON on its own doesn’t quite seem to work either. I think I’m just in a picky mood today. |
| 13 | SABBATICAL = (A BALTIC BASE)* with |
| 20 | MOLLIFIED = |
| 23 | FLAT + MATE |
| 25 | TIPPET = “TIPPETT” – I needed aids for this one as I didn’t know the scarf or the composer |
| 26 | SEA + FARE + R |
| 28 | TRANSSHIP = (THIN SPARS)* |
| 29 | P(H + ON)IC |
| 31 | TAKE ABACK + SEAT |
| 33 | SPRING + BOARD |
| 34 | KNAVISHNESS – dd, the first being cryptic, playing on a knave being a jack in a pack of cards |
| 35 | BIOGRAPHER – cd |
| 36 | REV + ER(BE)RANT |
| 40 | E + MOLL + IE + N |
| 41 | BAL(LIST)A – Lake Bala being the largest natural lake in Wales, and a defintion of ‘list’ that I wasn’t aware of – a border, or bordering strip, usually of cloth. I got this from the definition alone, and needed aids to break it down. |
| 43 | O + AT + MEAL |
| 45 | NONAGON = ON rev + NAG + ON |
| 46 | P(ASS)AGE |
| 47 | SUN + SET |
| 50 | ER(A)SE – Alexander Selkirk was the marooned Scotsman who probably acted as the inspiration for Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe, and as such presumably spoke Scots Gaelic, or Erse. |
I also came to the same conclusion as you about BAR (as in music) and GATE (as in, for example, Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma-Gate in York). I’m not too familiar with Scandinavian street names, but, now I come to think of it, GATE is of course related to the German Gasse meaning “a lane”. (Doh! Why had I never spotted that connection before?)
aLI(A,I)SON The I should be inserted for “current”.
Regards,
Adrian Cobb
P.S. How do I become non-anonymous?
24 ac should read “eelpout”.
Adrian Cobb
(but still anon)
I too wasted a little time wanting “a quarter of the French” in 22ac to be EST.