Sorry, busy weekend, no time to write anything up yet. All I can say is I’ll get around to it eventually!
Better late than never I suppose. I thought this was quite tough in places due to tricky vocabulary and general knowledge required, but the wordplay was usually helpful. Solving time 19:41.
| Across |
| 1 |
HARDTOP – HARD TO + P(arking). As opposed to a soft-top or convertible, I suppose. Not a word you see very often for a car. |
| 5 |
ANFIELD – AN + FIELD. Home of Liverpool FC. |
| 9 |
WITHSTAND – WAND (stick) around [T(own) after (this)*]. |
| 10 |
VAGUE – V(ery) + AGUE (fit). |
| 11 |
AWAY IN A MANGER – (a Wagnerian may)*. Straight in, helped by the enumeration. |
| 13 |
GREAT AUK – GREAT + A UK |
| 15 |
LINDEN – INDEN(t) next to L(ine). |
| 17 |
TAB KEY – cryptic definition. |
| 19 |
COVETOUS – C.O. + VETO + US. The 10th Commandment: “Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s house” etc. |
| 22 |
HOUSEHOLD NAME – HOUSEHOLD (family) + NAME (title). |
| 25 |
TARKA – T.A. (Territorial Army, volunteers) around ARK. Henry Williamson’s eponymous otter. |
| 26 |
HAUT MONDE – (me hand-out)*. Tricky, as I never expect French words when looking at anagram fodder. Needed all the checking letters. |
| 27 |
MEERKAT – sounds like “mere cat”. |
| 28 |
SYNODAL – LADY’S reversed around NO. |
| Down |
| 1 |
HEWN – WHEN with the W moving two letters down. |
| 2 |
RAT RACE – R.A. (= Royal Artillery) + TRACE(r). |
| 3 |
TESLA – A + L + SET all reversed. I don’t know if anyone’s bothered counting, but I bet Tesla has appeared more than any other scientist in crosswords, more thanks to his useful group of letters than his fame. |
| 4 |
PLATINUM – (nuptial m)* |
| 5 |
ANDEAN – A + N(ew) + DEAN |
| 6 |
FIVE-A-SIDE – FIVE (famous group, from Enid Blyton’s Famous Five books) + ASIDE. |
| 7 |
ENGAGED – double definition. |
| 8 |
DREARINESS – DINES + S(on) around REAR. |
| 12 |
I GOT RHYTHM – cryptic definition for this song by George and Ira Gershwin. |
| 14 |
THEME PARK – THE MARK around E.P. |
| 16 |
COLD CUTS – COLD (mild illness) + CUTS (reduces). |
| 18 |
BOURREE – E’ER (always) + RUB (difficulty) reversed around O. Never heard of the dance, but got it from the wordplay. “A brisk dance in duple time, from the Auvergne or the Basque provinces”. |
| 20 |
OCEANID – O(n)CE + AN ID. An ocean nymph in Greek mythology. |
| 21 |
GO PHUT – GOP (Grand Old Party, the Republicans’ nickname) + HUT (mean house). |
| 23 |
ADMIN – hidden in “reAD MINutes”. |
| 24 |
PEAL – PE(d)AL |
I blogged that puzzle with ‘Tarka’ before, and still didn’t remember, just put it in from the cryptic.
BTW, if you really get stuck on a Saturday, you can always call on the subs’ bench.
“for” is regularly used in the sense of “the preceding wordplay leads to”, as it does in this case.
The fourth participle form of ‘covetous’ is derived from the gerundive form of the old english equivalent of the Norman word for “fred”. Leading inexorably to the conclusion that to use such an adjective to describe yur state when you break a commandment, as an equivalent (or indeed any form of equivalence, howsoever defined) is just not cricket