Solving time 20:28 – should’ve been a bit quicker but I carelessly bunged in SADDLE BAG for 15D, which really threw me and stopped me getting the two long answers for a few minutes. Apart from that it was all fairly straightforward – even the two unknowns at 11A and 2D had very helpful wordplay and went straight in.
Good luck to those of you going to the Times Crossword Championships today. Unfortunately I won’t be there as I’ve had a gout attack and my foot’s too swollen to get a shoe on. Anyway, on with last week’s puzzle…
| Across |
| 1 |
MAKES UP – MAKE SUP, ref. the saying “You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink.” |
| 5 |
WEIGH-IN – sounds like “way in” |
| 9 |
TEA LEAVES – (elevates a)*, Cockney rhyming slang for thieves. |
| 10 |
WIDOW – WINDOW (opportunity) minus N (last letter of “occasion”). |
| 11 |
LIKUD – hidden reversed in “departed UK – ill-disposed”. The ruling conservative political party in Israel. |
| 12 |
REKINDLED – R.E. (Royal Engineers = soldiers) + KIND LED (sort not born leaders). |
| 14 |
OVER MY DEAD BODY – MY (gracious) + DEAD BODY (remains), after OVER (maiden, perhaps). |
| 17 |
POWER BREAKFAST – POWER (might) + BREAK (rest) + FAST (swiftly). |
| 21 |
PINEAPPLE – (plane, pipe)* |
| 23 |
EMMET – MET (settled) next to ‘EM (border as pronounced in an East London borough). An old word for an ant. |
| 24 |
AT SEA – alternate letters of “Take a satnav”, reversed. |
| 25 |
BEER BELLY – cryptic definition, made me smile! |
| 26 |
YORKIST – YORK (bowl, cricketing term meaning to bowl a batsman out with a full-pitched delivery) + IS + T (meeting at right-angles, e.g. a junction). |
| 27 |
NIGGARD – NIG(h) (to hand briefly) + DRAG (yank) reversed. In answer to jackkt’s question in yesterday’s blog, here’s an example. You can capitalise an ordinary noun to deceive (as long as it makes sense capitalised), but you can’t drop the capital from a proper noun. Unless you’re the setter of the TLS crossword, who breaks that particular rule all the time! |
| Down |
| 1 |
METTLE – ME (immediate forerunner of FA – as in doh, ray, me etc) + TITLE (Premiership, say) without the I (one lacking). Brilliant lift-and-separate clue. |
| 2 |
KHARKIV – R (mayor finally) inside KHAKI (material for military) + V(olume). Ukraine’s second-largest city. |
| 3 |
SLENDERER – LEND (advance) inside SERE (dry) + R(un). |
| 4 |
POVERTY TRAP – OP reversed (upcoming work) + (part time very)*, &lit. |
| 5 |
WAS – WASH (bath) without the H (no longer hot). |
| 6 |
IOWAN – O (nothing) inside I (single) + WAN (white). |
| 7 |
HIDALGO – HI (welcome) + GLAD reversed (on the way up pleased) + O(ld). |
| 8 |
NOWADAYS – (do any WAS)*, the answer to 5dn making up part of the anagram fodder. |
| 13 |
KEEP AN EYE ON – KEY (principal) + EON (time), around E (centre of clear) + PANE (glass). |
| 15 |
DUFFEL BAG – DUFF (pants, i.e. rubbish) + G(ood), ABLE (fit) reversed. |
| 16 |
EPIPHANY – E(nglish) + PIP (seed) + HAY (grass) around N(orth) (point). |
| 18 |
WINDSOR – WIN (gain) + DSO (Distinguished Service Order, high military honour) + R(ight). |
| 19 |
SOMALIA – (aim also)* |
| 20 |
STAYED – double definition. |
| 22 |
AMATI – A + MAT (tangle) + I(sland). Famous family of Italian violin-makers. |
| 25 |
BIT – double definition. |
I was waiting for this blog the whole week, to find out how 1d worked. I had naively taken FA to refer to football, and assumed there was some sort of preliminary title match, or earlier version, or some such that could explain ME; if I could print “D’oh!” here in 20-point type, I would. Splendid clue! COD with oak-leaf cluster. But 15d was no slouch, either.
I tend to think of ‘yank’ as being something short and sharp whereas ‘drag’ is a longer haul of something that offers resistance. I rather like your ‘corpse’ example where undoubtedly either word could be used but would they convey the exactly the same meaning?
Not sure what the “borough” is doing in 23ac, the clue seems better off without it. My loi.
Sorry I won’t see you today Andy. Good luck to all the entrants!
Didn’t understand 1ac before coming here and I never heard of LIKUD.
I was really pleased when I finally cracked 1d which I only got after I had spotted the tonic-sol-fa reference.
Thanks for the example re capitalization, Andy. I hope it will stick in my brain this time but wouldn’t count on it.
Returning to my original userpic today to mark the occasion and will enjoy my day all the more for not being part of it. Needless to say, good luck to all those braver than me who put themselves through the ordeal.
Edited at 2012-10-20 08:48 am (UTC)
I crashed and burned at the championship this morning, with my last three bunged-in answers in the last minute all proving wrong, and they were spread across two puzzles so I only actually solved one correctly. And that’s assuming I didn’t make a stupid mistake in the first one, because I didn’t get time to check. Ah well, there’s always next year…
Well done to all the competitors!
Interesting point about the “East London borough” – one of those occasions where you add a bit for the sake of the surface in the hope that the effect on the cryptic reading will be neutral
Sorry to hear about Andy’s gout. But as ever thanks for the blog and all the comments.
I’ve a tried and tested rule which says: “never put in a word you’ve not heard of unless you’re absolutely desperate”. But with 2dn, there either had to be an alternative spelling of the familiar KHARKOV or an alternative spelling of KHAKI, and the former seemed decidedly more likely.
Sorry you didn’t make it to the Championship this year, Andy. I was wondering what had happened to you.
Hilary Marchant
Alternatively you can navigate with the calendar on the right of the screen and go directly to that day’s blog entry.
I see what my problem was in searching: that puzzle is misnumbered as 24924.
That’s why this isn’t the Sudoku blog!