Quick Cryptic 3157 by Mara

Not too tricky, but plenty of interesting things on offer.

I made fairly straight progress through this, finishing up in 5:06, about a minute quicker than yesterday. There was some nicely quirky clueing and bits of deviousness spread throughout.

Many thanks to Mara!

Across
1 Using paw, dish finally in a lather — doing this? (7,2)
WASHING UP – anagram (in a lather) of USING PAW and H (disH “finally”)
6 Tree the solver picked up? (3)
YEW – is “picked up”, or heard the same as you (the solver)
8 Halloween item to get one’s own blood circulating? (7)
PUMPKIN – cryptic hint, with KIN = one’s own blood
9 Superhero’s sidekick dressin’ (5)
ROBIN – ROBING = DRESSING
10 Understand what to do — as 11 probably would? (4,3,5)
KNOW THE SCORE – double-ish definition, with 11d = WAGNERIAN
12 Puritan swine claims right (4)
PRIG – PIG (swine) claims R(ight)
13 Yen in Tokyo, currency here primarily (4)
ITCH – the “primary” letters of the previous four words, including that pesky little IN
17 Eccentric hunting loner, ultimately (2,3,4,3)
IN THE LONG RUN – anagram (eccentric) of HUNTING LONER
20 Defence from boxer with big cut (5)
ALIBI – ALI (boxer, as in Muhammed) with BIG in plain sight, “cut”
21 Feeble executive in frogman’s outfit (3,4)
WET SUIT – WET (feeble) SUIT (executive)
23 Appreciate   archaeological site (3)
DIG – double definition
24 Fresh herb and hollow nut in shop (9)
NEWSAGENT – NEW (fresh) SAGE (herb) and NT (“hollow” NuT)
Down
1 Clean nick, ceiling scrubbed (4)
WIPE – SWIPE = nick, “scrub” the “ceiling”, which in a down clue is the top or first letter
2 Marines all at sea in conference (7)
SEMINAR – anagram (all at sea) of MARINES
3 Type I like every so often (3)
ILK – I and L i K e “every so often”
4 Indian leader partial to meditating, and high-born (6)
GANDHI – “partial to” meditatinG AND HIgh-born
5 Cold   fading away (9)
PERISHING – double definition
6 Old bishop lad knocked over, thug! (5)
YOBBO – O(ld) B(ishop) BOY (lad) all knocked over, or reversed. YOB is “back slang” for BOY. Back slang was an early Victorian invention among market sellers so they could chit-chat right in front of customers without them understanding. As an example, “one butcher particularly disliked a certain customer; when he saw her coming he’d call to his assistant: ‘tuck the dillo woc a tib of dillo woc’ — ‘cut the old cow a bit of old cow’.”
7 Footballer’s victory over Germany (6)
WINGER – WIN (victory) over GER(many)
11 Waning era upset fan of composer (9)
WAGNERIAN – anagram (upset) of WANING ERA
14 Tailoring unfashionable, make better clothes (7)
COUTURE – OUT (unfashionable) is “clothed” by CURE (make better)
15 Bonzer  bloke from Oz? (6)
WIZARD – double definition
16 Dog in curtsey, I’m amazed! (3-3)
BOW-WOW – BOW (curtsey) WOW! (I’m amazed!). Originally the bark of a dog, before becoming a childish name for the dog itself. About the earliest appearance is in the Tempest:Harke, harke, bowgh wawgh: the watch-Dogges barke.
18 Freaky night for Addams Family character (5)
THING – anagram (freaky) of NIGHT
19 Test failed, mark written in margin (4)
STET – anagram (failed) of TEST. Latin for “let it stand”, a direction written in the margin of a manuscript, etc, that something which has been altered or struck out is to remain uncorrected. Tricky little clue if you don’t know the word; it’s one of the things I’ve managed to remember from some dim and distant crossword.
22 Drink character mentioned? (3)
TEA – sounds/is mentioned the same as TEE, or T, as in the letter.

104 comments on “Quick Cryptic 3157 by Mara”

  1. Thought I was doing well until I checked my time of 25 mins and a DNF on wizard- really daft as I had the checkers and even thought of it when going through Oz characters. Thanks Roly and Mara

  2. Did this on a sort of anti clockwise direction and on paper. When someone finds an ‘omnibus’ on Clapham let me know. Vocabulary changes.
    About 10 mins.
    4/4 so far this week

  3. 12 minutes. Happy with that until I came here and saw that most solvers found this easy and recorded much better times.

    90 minutes on 15 x 15 and still 2 short. Still not happening for me compared to many. ☹️

  4. Normally I am well into SCC territory but today I escaped! And it was nearly a top to bottom solve!!. Held up at the end by ALIBI (Oh that kind of defence) and WIZARD (Oh that Oz, not the one down under). And I too have written STET IRL so that went in very quickly. Happy day 😊

  5. Started great and then slowed until I finished in 17:17. Wouldn’t have known STET but for previous appearances in these. Thanks all.

  6. 17 mins…

    Just realised I didn’t record my time for this – must have got distracted at some point during the day.

    FOI – 3dn “Ilk”
    LOI – 10ac “Know the score”
    COD – 14dn “Couture”

    Thanks as usual!

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