Solving time: About 40 minutes, with the last 10 minutes spent on three clues – 7/11/12.
One unknown word for me today – NAIRA, but a few others were unfamiliar – TATAMI, PLENIPOTENTIARY and PO as a chamber pot. I also didn’t know GRENADINE was a material as well as a drink.
There were lots of comments on the Club Forum against this one, although most of them seemed to be about censored comments. Of the actual clues, the word ‘Polish’ in 6d seemed to cause the most consternation.
cd = cryptic def., dd = double def., rev = reversal, homophones are written in quotes, anagrams as (–)*, and removals like this
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | TRE |
| 5 | ARSENIC – cd – A chemist would see ‘As’ as the chemical symbol for arsenic. |
| 9 | UTE + N/S + I + L – ‘van’ = UTE crops up quite often – it’s a mainly Australian colloquialism for a utility vehicle. |
| 10 | P(ERR)IER – I was a little surprised to see a trademarked name appearing as a solution |
| 11 | P(L)ENI(PO)TENTIARY – I was only vaguely aware of this word, and I hadn’t come across PO as a (mainly Australian again) colloquialism for a chamber pot, so despite all the checking letters, this was my last one in. |
| 12 | TAT |
| 14 | MICHIGAN = (I’M ACHING)* |
| 17 | TELETHON – cd – ‘Set’ as in television set |
| 18 | UR + GENT – Everyone’s favourite old city |
| 21 | PERSONA NON GRATA – ‘After new performance’ is an anagrind, so it’s (NAG OPERA STAR)* about NO + |
| 24 | TAP + IOC + A |
| 25 | SEABIRD = (BRAISED)* |
| 26 | RUS(S)E + LL |
| 27 | DIOCESE = (SEE COD I)* – ‘See’ is doing double duty here as the definition and part of the anagrist, but it’s clearly indicated so that’s fine. |
| Down | |
| 1 |
|
| 2 | ELEMENT + AL |
| 3 | S |
| 4 | NELSON – dd – the Admiral and the wrestling hold |
| 5 | APPLE-PIE – If something is in apple-pie order, then it is perfectly organised |
| 6 | STRETCHER – cd – a stretcher in its most basic form is a piece of canvas slung between two poles. Because it is made with poles then it is ‘polish’. This is polish used in a made-up sense, but the question mark at the end of the clue makes this permissible. |
| 7 | NAIRA = (I RAN)* + A – I didn’t know the word, but it was the only plausible arrangement of the letters. |
| 8 | CAR + R |
| 13 | METRONOME – cd |
| 15 | GRENADINE = (ENDEARING)* – I’ve not come across grenadine as a material before, only as a drink |
| 16 | NO TAT + |
| 17 | TA(P |
| 19 | T + WADDLE – I wasn’t sure about T as a standard abbreviation for ‘tense’, but I found it listed in the grammatical sense, so I guess it’s fine. |
| 20 | S |
| 22 | ROPES – dd – an adept would ‘know the ropes’ – I liked this one a lot. My COD. |
| 23 | GUANO – dd (or maybe a cd) – bird droppings used as fertiliser. |
Incidentally I am 100% certain that I had this discussion here some years ago but can’t find any trace of it using the archive searches.
65 minutes with liberal use of aids towards the end. I tend to give up after an hour when I feel the setter has not always played fair in some of the answers to the ones I have solved.
PS…Every time I try to post a comment these days I’m told my password is incorrect.
I doubted that on the basis of their inability to cope with more than 2 or 3 syllables in a row.
We had great difficulty restraining our laughter in school when we heard of the River Po in Italy.
What’s the difference between a rich Scotsman, a poor Scotsman and a dead Scotsman.
A rich Scotsman has a canopy over his bed, a poor Scotsman has a can o’ pee under his bed and a dead Scotsman canna’ pee at all.