Solving time 29:44, which didn’t seem excessive at all for this puzzle. The difficulty came solely from the brilliantly crafted clues – smooth surfaces throughout and hardly a word wasted. Top job by the setter.
| Across |
| 1 |
RANSOM – RAN (managed) + SOM(e) (quite a, cut). |
| 5 |
SOFT COPY – S(t)O(r)Y around FT (newspaper) + COP (busy, Scottish slang for a policeman). |
| 9 |
JOYOUSLY – J(ack) + YOYO (toy) reversed around US (American) + L(eft). |
| 10 |
AUGUST – A(nswer) + U(rge) + GUST (get up suddenly). |
| 11 |
MUMBAI – MU (letter from Greek) + MBA (business graduate) + I (one). The city we used to know as Bombay. |
| 12 |
IN CHARGE – (reaching)*. |
| 14 |
ANNE HATHAWAY – HENNA (dye) reversed + AWAY (out) next to A TH(ursday). |
| 17 |
HANDICAPPING – HAND (present) + ICING (sugary stuff) around A PP (very soft). |
| 20 |
WIND DOWN – WIND(e)D (out of breath, minus the E for energy) + OWN (have). |
| 22 |
KIMONO – KO (put out) around I (one) MON (day). |
| 23 |
KIND OF – DO (party) + F(emale), next to KIN (family). |
| 25 |
CLAPTRAP – C(ape) + LAP (go round) + TRAP (corner). |
| 26 |
VERBALLY – (L(iberal), bravely)*. |
| 27 |
KIDULT – KIT (clothes) around DUL(l) (flat mostly). An ugly portmanteau word, but it has its own entry in the dictionary. |
| Down |
| 2 |
AEOLUS – all 5 vowels plus the ‘S, with an extra pen stroke turning the I into an L. Aeolus was the Greek god of the winds. I don’t remember having come across this device before, so full marks to the setter for ingenuity. |
| 3 |
SNOWBOARDED – S,N (team at bridge) + BOARD (get on) inside OWED (outstanding). |
| 4 |
MESSIANIC – hidden in “comes Sian – I composed”. |
| 5 |
SKY-HIGH – (Y(oun)G, Sikh)* + H(usband). |
| 6 |
FRANC – FR (priest) + ANC (party in Johannesburg, the African National Congress). |
| 7 |
COG – COGITATE (to chew on things) minus “it ate”. |
| 8 |
POSTGRAD – POST (job) + ‘AD around GR (the last king). |
| 13 |
AMALGAMATED – (delta a gamma)* |
| 15 |
THINK-TANK – TH(e) (article not finishing) + INK-TANK (well for writer?) |
| 16 |
SANITIZE – SIZE (volume) around TINA reversed. |
| 18 |
PANICKY – A(mphibia)N inside PICKY (particular). |
| 19 |
ON CALL – ONE ALL (draw) but with C for Century replacing E for England. The ubiquitous cricket reference, but only in the surface reading. |
| 21 |
OFFAL – OF FALSTAFF (Sir John’s) without STAFF (personnel). Sir John Falstaff turns up in a couple of Shakespeare’s plays. |
| 24 |
DUB – BUD (friend from over the Atlantic) reversed. |
Edited at 2012-04-28 07:04 am (UTC)
Top stuff, setter!
All the dictionaries in the Oxford stable, so far as I know, list the ‘-ize’ variant first. Of course, it’s not wthout significance that American English fossilised many English forms (rhotic ‘r’ comes to mind) and so may claim to be closer to the original – or as close as Oxford. For what it’s worth, I attended the University but use ‘-ise’ and don’t bother with the ‘Oxford comma’, using a comma before the ‘and’ only when and if clarity dictates.
I thought not!
Edited at 2012-04-28 09:08 am (UTC)
Martin is correct that the device used at 2dn has cropped up before but I believe it wasn’t that long ago – no more than 12 months at most. I needed aids to solve it despite having met ‘Aeolian’ previously (it’s a type of musical harp and there was a hall of that name in New Bond Street which was a BBC studio in the 60s and 70s) and knowing its association with the wind. Unfortunately I didn’t equate that with ‘howlers’ before looking up the answer.
I also needed to cheat on SANITIZE (should have got that one!) and KIDULT which I don’t feel so bad about.
21dn was much easier to solve than to work out the wordplay.
Mostly an enjoyable puzzle but just on the very extreme edge of my comfort zone in few places.
12 ac in 25038 on Dec 21 2011:
“Blind Ann’s not completely knocked sideways onto mattress by Lee Short”
BEDAZZLE
Using the geometry of letters, 2 Ns being rotated 90 degrees to get 2 Zs.
Edited at 2012-04-28 01:15 pm (UTC)