All fair though, in spite of a nasty biff-trap for the unwary at 14ac. Except of course that it doesn’t fit! What a muppet I am. I did very nearly bung it in but if I had I would have noticed. I had all the required knowledge, so for me at least the difficulty arose from cunning clues rather than obscurity, and I enjoyed it a lot.
So thanks to Dean and here’s how I think it all works…
Definitions are underlined, anagrams indicated like (TIHS)*, anagram indicators are in italics.
| Across | |
| 1 | Second mate will welcome her round |
| SPHERAL – S, P(HER)AL. Not a word I can remember coming across before. | |
| 5 | A man’s right? |
| HIMSELF – I think the explanation here is that if you’re ‘yourself’ then you’re ‘right’. I’m not sure this is entirely convincing but I can’t think of anything better. | |
| 9 | Army might motivate royalty to keep enemy captive |
| FIREPOWER – FIRE(POW), ER. | |
| 10 | Get into trouble over religious sayings |
| LOGIA – Reversal of AI(GO)L. Get = scram = go. A term I didn’t know. | |
| 11 | Crude oil’s made in town flat? |
| TWO-DIMENSIONAL – (OILS MADE IN TOWN)*. | |
| 13 | What a shame — line is wonky |
| AWRY – AW, RY (railway, line). | |
| 14 | Aspiring starlets, maybe, with fine hair |
|
WAITRESSES – W, AI (fine), TRESSES. |
|
| 17 | In a manner of speaking, patriotic? |
| INTONATION – IN TO NATION, geddit? | |
| 18 | Mark’s young lady has nothing to hide |
| GOAL – G(O)AL. I thought the definition was rather odd, because a GOAL is not quite the same thing as a mark or target. But Collins defines ‘mark’ as ‘a target or goal’ so that’s me told. | |
| 20 | Drug one rejected — insult it during call |
| PHENOBARBITONE – PHONE containing a reversal of ONE, then BARB (insult), IT. I knew this drug because one of my kids took it when very little as a precaution against seizures. Also known as phenobarbital. | |
| 23 | Vanilla left in French bread |
| PLAIN – P(L)AIN. This might be a reference to the figurative sense of the word (often ‘plain vanilla’) but vanilla ice cream, for instance, is often referred to as PLAIN. | |
| 24 | Slight gradient, unusual direction |
| DENIGRATE – (GRADIENT)*, E. | |
| 25 | Girls’ school or, contrarily, area in paradise |
| ROEDEAN – reversal of OR, EDE(A)N. | |
| 26 | Bondage makes you drool, yes? |
| SLAVERY – SLAVER, Y. | |
| Down | |
| 1 | Seat that’s long yet slightly short |
|
SOFA – SO FA |
|
| 2 | Outlaw’s cut in profit? What about bounty first? |
| HEREWARD THE WAKE – reversal of EH, REWARD, T(HEW)AKE. An Anglo-Saxon rebel against Norman rule who has appeared in past puzzles. TAKE is revenue rather than profit, but I expect the non-accountants among you will be less bothered by this. | |
| 3 | Charges across quiet part of river |
| RAPIDS – RA(P)IDS. | |
| 4 | See chicken turn, mostly harmless |
| LOW-IMPACT – LO, WIMP, ACT. Reminds me of trying to play Elite when I was a kid. The game wasn’t available on the ZX Spectrum, which is what I had, so I had to try and play it at a friend’s house on his BBC Micro. I never had time to figure it out, which a part of me still – rather strangely – regrets. | |
| 5 | Bird that woman’s cooking |
| HERON – HER, ON. | |
| 6 | Hatmaker wrong to stop one working on face |
| MILLINER – M(ILL)INER. As in a coal face, of course. | |
| 7 | Speed event that may damage part of clutch |
| EGG-AND-SPOON RACE – CD. A lot of people don’t like cryptic definitions but when they work they’re one of my favourite types of clue: they’re sort of extended puns, and I love puns. This one works. | |
| 8 | Pat Wild opens zip |
| FLAWLESSLY – F(LAWLESS)LY. I didn’t think of LAWLESS for ‘wild’, I didn’t think of FLY for ‘zip’ (I thought it would be something to do with nothing) and I didn’t get anywhere near thinking of FLAWLESSLY for ‘pat’. Eventually I got all the checkers, saw the answer from that, and reverse-engineered the workings of the clue. | |
| 12 | Blemish is very good for a potato |
| MARIS PIPER – MAR, IS, PI (good or seemingly so), PER (for). A floury variety excellent for chips, roast potatoes or mash. | |
| 15 | Brass instruments new to some R’n’B |
| TROMBONES – (TO SOME RB)*. | |
| 16 | A new type of word put on church report |
| ANNOUNCE – A, N, NOUN, CE. | |
| 19 | “T” in “S” as a brand |
| STIGMA – S(T)IGMA. | |
| 21 | Poet in a posh study |
AUDEN – A, U, DEN.
Innit. |
|
| 22 | Hot edges of stone axes |
|
SEXY – S |
|
I was pleased to discover the MARIS PIPER strictly from wordplay.
Edited at 2020-11-15 06:45 am (UTC)
I’m another baffled by ‘himself’ but looking forward to being enlightened.
I like the knack the setter has for condensing the clues for long/-ish answers – Maris Piper a fine example.
Wasn’t sure about Y for Yes in Slavery, but it had to be that. It’s not in Collins or Oxford, but who knows? In the latest ST competition a perfectly decent clue is relegated on the grounds that R for recipe isn’t in Collins or Oxford, but Dean Mayer used it a couple of years ago (in ST4480 – I looked it up having a vague memory of it). I suppose a professional setter is allowed liberties that competition entrants aren’t, but it seems unfair to single someone out for it. C Davies
I’m pretty sure I’ve said here and/or in clue writing reports that Y=Yes and N=No are non-dictionary abbreviations that I allow because they are so common in real life. I also allow ones which are on the single-letter abbrev list for Times setters. I believe one or two of those are outside our usual dictionaries.
I don’t know which puzzle you’re referring to about R=recipe. STC 4480 was by Tim Moorey and printed in 2012. I looked at 4880 but that’s not Dean’s.
It is possible that I’ve made an inconsistent decision, but there is no intentional difference between what our setters are allowed to do and the comments in the clue writing contest. That includes the fact that I’m extremely reluctant about words and meanings which are in Chambers but not Collins or Oxford D of English.
If it’s one you overlooked and can’t remember then it’s one of those things, but the competition entrant and others may have had a memory of it and be flummoxed about the ruling. CD
(as jackkt said at the time)
Fortunately, Hereward the Wake was a write-in from the enumeration, and I knew logion from New Testament Greek.
I’m not sure how one might biff ACTRESSES (9) for WAITRESSES (10) although I suppose one might attempt to do so before realising one’s mistake.
I used aids eventually to get to FLAWLESSLY and the unknown LOGIA.
My understanding is that the ST relies upon Collins and the ODE but as long ago as 2015 Peter B stated that he would allow ‘Y / Yes’ and ‘N / No’ even though they don’t appear in those dictionaries (or didn’t at the time). They’re not in my Chambers either. Another one he allows is ‘H / Hearts’ although Chambers has that covered, as does the Bridge column over on the next page of the Sunday Times!
Edited at 2020-11-15 06:17 am (UTC)
Edited at 2020-11-15 06:45 am (UTC)
NHO LOGIA. Never managed to parse HEREWARD THE WAKE (thanks !)
Alas DNF as I incorrectly biffed my LOI. Nothing to do with actresses though….
FOI PLAIN
LOI “mattresses” (You stupid boy !)
COD LOW-IMPACT
TIME 15:45
Lady who comes between master and mattress.
I did briefly consider Mattresses at 14a, which does fit, but found the clear and clever answer. Had a problem parsing Himself (now clearly explained -thanks) and Goal. Last two were LOGIA (unknown) and COD FLAWLESSLY.
Was delighted to finish this eventually all correct. Worth the effort.
David
Thought himself as in “he’s not himself/right today” was OK.
Sadly I know almost nothing at all about Hereward the Wake, including his legal status. Looking at the Wiki entry, neither does anyone else.
I assumed actresses were banned after ‘the smelling salts incident’ a few months back on the QC with Miss Jeanie. How are the PC brigade with WAITRESSES?
FOI 23ac PLAIN
LOI 10ac LOGIA
COD 12dn MARIS PIPER
WOD 14ac WAITRESSES
Time: I started at 2.40pm
Edited at 2020-11-15 05:42 pm (UTC)
Pretty tough going for me probably caused by the use of so many of the lesser known definitions of a word for the answer or the different components of the word play – HIMSELF, WAITRESSES, ‘get’ – GO, FLY – ‘zip’, ‘army might’, etc.
Found that was having to use the word play to derive an answer more so than the other way round in this puzzle.
A number of new terms – the potato, religious sayings and the drug. Thought that 11a and 17a were the pick of a very good bunch.
Finished, like many in that NE corner with FLAWLESSLY, LOGIA and HIMSELF the last few in.