Solving time: 16:57 to get all but the top left corner. Maybe half an hour more to finish it! The last holdouts were 1D, 3D, 9A and 12A. I just went blank, and probably looked at it three or four times before really knuckling down and grinding out the answers. One for polyglots, with an Americanism plus Greek and Spanish words. Nothing unfamiliar though – the difficulty was all in the clues.
| Across |
| 1 |
BRASS OFF – OFF (not running) after BRASS (money). Not the usual meaning of nark, which threw me a bit. |
| 5 |
PAWPAW – “pa” in an American accent, twice. I suppose some Americans pronounce “pa” like this. The Beverly Hillbillies spring to mind. |
| 9 |
HITHERTO – HIT (affected) + HERO (brave chap) around T(ime). |
| 10 |
BREEZE – double definition. |
| 12 |
SLICK – cryptic definition. |
| 13 |
STILL LIFE – STILL (quiet) + LIFE (breath). I thought the second part was a bit loose, but it’s confirmed in the dictionary. |
| 14 |
HALF-TIMBERED – B(ishop) inside HALF-TIME, + RED (cardinal). |
| 18 |
YADA YADA YADA – AD (bill) + AY (I agree) reversed three times. Last time I saw it written it had double D’s, but Chambers gives both spellings. |
| 21 |
HOI POLLOI – H(aving) + POLL inside a pair of OI’s (round one twice). Greek for the masses. |
| 23 |
IMOLA – hidden reversed in “hospital omitting”. Home of the San Marino Grand Prix. |
| 24 |
BAILIE – B(ook) + A + I LIE (storyteller’s confession). An old name for a sheriff’s officer or county magistrate. |
| 25 |
AIR-TO-AIR – cryptic definition. Seems to be talking about directorships rather than missiles. |
| 26 |
EL NINO – (online)*. It’s not a current though. It’s a climate pattern caused by surface temperature in the Pacific Ocean combined with air pressure. |
| 27 |
CYPRIOTS – C(aught) + SPY reversed around RIOT. |
| Down |
| 1 |
BEHEST – EH (come again?) inside BEST (elite). |
| 2 |
ANTRIM – ANT + RIM. |
| 3 |
SPEAKEASY – EASY (not forced) underneath S (player often dealing?) + PEAK (high). S for South as a bridge player I suppose. As far as I know he doesn’t get to deal any more often than anybody else though. Last one I got. |
| 4 |
FIT AS A FIDDLE – T.A. (Territorial Army, volunteers) inside F1 (motor racing) + SA (sex appeal) + FIDDLE (do). |
| 6 |
APRIL – lovely cryptic definition. May 1 comes after the end of April. |
| 7 |
PREMIERE – PRE + ERE (two different words for before) around M(arks) + 1. |
| 8 |
WEEKENDS – WEE + D(aughter) inside KENS. The surface refers to the American SAT exams, which are university admission tests. I can never remember the rule about capitalization. Is this fair? I know proper nouns can’t lose their starting capital to fit the surface reading, but I don’t think making the whole word upper case is covered. I had a flick through Don Manley’s Crossword Manual but couldn’t find anything. What does the panel think? |
| 11 |
NIMINY-PIMINY – I inside (in my PIN in my)*. |
| 15 |
BEDSITTER – BED (plot) + SITTER (something not to be missed, although usually only used when it is!) |
| 16 |
BY THE BYE – TH(ursday) inside BYE-BYE. |
| 17 |
ADDITION – ADDICTION without the C. |
| 19 |
TOBAGO – (boat)* + GO |
| 20 |
WALRUS – “chips” being slang for a carpenter. You can read Lewis Carroll’s poem here. |
| 22 |
ONION – O (love) + (u)NION. |
Last in SPEAKEASY followed by ‘shine’ corrected to SLICK. never heard of NIMINY-PIMINY, which doesn’t sound a pedantic sort of word, anyway. COD to BEHEST – I’m a sucker for words with an exclamatory or phatic component.
At 5A I thought basing a homophone on a supposed US pronunciation was dangerous. The variety of accents from Chicago to St Louis and Boston to LA surely renders this daft, particularly in a UK puzzle.
I was thrown a bit by EL NINO, which as you say gives rise to currents but isn’t one itself.
3D is just wrong. I can only think the setter is confused by bridge puzzles in which South is usually shown as declarer. The deal rotates around the table with each player either dealing in turn or being deemed dealer when the same pre-dealt hands are played by all tables
SATS are also UK exams and I have learned over the years to ignore all punctuation including capital letters. It didn’t particularly strike me as unfair when solving.
My last in was 23A where IMOLA meant absolutely nothing to me until I Googled it and then realised that GP meant motor racing rather than a doctor.
Apologies for the EL NINO error.
I see where you are coming from. I think it’s the word “often” that has caused the problem here. If it is removed from the clue there is no confusion and the clue still works. In solving one can’t find a real purpose for its inclusion. I guess the other factor is that older hands have a Pavlovian response to a single letter meaning for “player”
I know of course that it’s commonplace for ‘one’ in a clue to mean the letter ‘I’ in a solution but I’m not sure I recall meeting the perpendicular pronoun representing the number ‘1’ in a clue before, nor am I sure that it works in a set of clues where the typeface for each symbol is perfectly distinct. But I’m probably being picky because I couldn’t solve the bloody clue.
Conceive me if you can
A Japanese young man,
Francesca da Rimini, niminy-piminy
je-ne-sais-quois young man
However I found it very difficult. There were a number of clues where even after solving I couldn’t see the wordplay for a while (e.g. “for everyone” = u in 22dn) which I choose to interpret as a sign of originality on the part of the setter rather than my own denseness. Also a number of complete unknowns including NIMINY-PIMINY and BAILIE. WALRUS was a lucky guess.
Thanks to the setter for the intervention above: I was puzzled by “often dealing”. I’ve never played bridge in my life and I’m happy with the convention (it is so common) but I can see the point.
I rather liked 18ac, I must say: cheeky!
Well done the setter for a challenging puzzle.
Nick M
Nick M