Time somewhere in the region of 25-30 minutes (forgot to stop timer), which makes it on the hard side for me, though one of those where, on analysis, I can’t really see why: I got terribly bogged down in the NW corner in particular, though I don’t now think it was any more difficult than the other quarters. Anyway, as is well established, no two people see a puzzle the same way, so I imagine this is just me.
| |
| Across |
| 1 |
COSINESS – CO-SINES + S(on); the Jumbo I just blogged caught me out with “functions” as the mathematical term, so I was more prepared this time. |
| 5 |
MALIGN – M(otorway) + ALIGN. |
| 9 |
RELIANCE – [EC (postcode of the City of London) + NAILER] all rev. |
| 10 |
GIDEON – “GIDDY” + ON. Gideon, of course, will be familiar to anyone who has gone through their hotel room in search of reading material and found his Bible. |
| 12 |
PLANTAIN LILY – (LATINPLAINLY)*. As usual, my solution came entirely from wordplay and eliminating the impossible / improbable from checking letters, though doubtless this leapt out at those with green fingers. |
| 15 |
SWARM – WAR in S(ergeant)M(ajor) – a non-commissioned officer, but an officer all the same. |
| 16 |
FETISHIST – (TESTSHIFI)*. |
| 18 |
TOURNEDOS – 0 in TURNED + (SO)rev; I have memories of seeing this on menus, hopefully when someone else was paying; one of a number of culinary terms related to this cut of beef; your local butcher or steakhouse may call it something slightly different. |
| 19 |
UNLIT – L(itre) in UNIT. |
| 20 |
EVANGELICALS – [SLAC(k) + I + LEG + NAVE]all rev. At first I thought there was something missing but that cheeky little “on” does service as “LEG” from cricketing terminology (for non-cricketers, the leg side = the on side). |
| 24 |
MAILER – This is the Norman in question, though I wasn’t convinced that one who puts on mail is necessarily a mailer. Though as usual, the defence might be that if it’s not certifiably wrong, and the sense is obvious, there is no problem. |
| 25 |
GOLD LACE – dyin(G) + OLD LACE. I took an age to eliminate GOLD LAME, and was trying to insert the chemical symbol AS, before I had a “D’oh!” moment when I remembered the most obvious companion to arsenic…
|
| 26 |
LUNATE – LUN(g) + ATE, i.e. (crescent) moon-shaped. |
| 27 |
ASSYRIAN – AS + ([YR + I] in SAN(atorium)). |
| Down |
| 1 |
CURL – double def; those from Scotland or the north of the Americas will doubtless leap to the correct sport more quickly than I did. |
| 2 |
SOLE – cryptic def. |
| 3 |
NEARLY MAN – another double def. |
| 4 |
SECOND FIDDLE – SECOND = back, FIDDLE = awkward job. |
| 6 |
APIAN – A(rea) + PIAN(o), the buzzers here being bees. |
| 7 |
INELIGIBLE – I can only take this as a straightforward definition in the second part, with the first being a sort of cryptic reversal of the adjective as used in the phrase “eligible bachelor”, though this barely seems cryptic to me. Anybody care to add? |
| 8 |
NANNY STATE – ANN in N.Y. STATE, which is what lies on the US side of Niagara. |
| 11 |
MALTESE CROSS – (MOSTCARELESS)*. |
| 13 |
ISOTHERMAL – hidden in thIS OTHER MALady. |
| 14 |
TABULATION – TABU + 0 in LATIN. |
| 17 |
SQUALIDLY – [A L in QUID] in SLY. |
| 21 |
GHENT – HEN in G(rea)T, which is a major city in Flanders. It is testament to the pervasiveness of Homer Simpson that when Belgium had its recent constitutional crisis, every time it was mentioned on Radio 4 news, I couldn’t help myself from thinking “Stupid Flanders”. |
| 22 |
WADI – WAD(e) = 1. |
| 23 |
DEAN – E(nergy) in DAN; the Dan in question has been appearing in the Dandy for long enough that I imagine every British based solver knows him without thinking, though he might be more obscure to overseas solvers. |
As anticipated not even a nod towards the 150th anniversary of publication of “Origins”. Poor show really.
Tom B.
Finished in just under 35 minutes with GIDEON and INELIGIBLE being the last to fall.
Slow but steady from beginning to end. The hidden word at 13d took longer to fall than it should. On TOURNEDOS I was thinking of ‘doorstep’ for thick slice for a long time.
I’d hope that anyone who would be really troubled by comments like this would solve both puzzles before looking at any blogs …
I don’t think you’ll see mailer = “one who puts on mail” in any dictionary – I think it’s based on the same kind of logic as flower=river (mail = cover with (chain-)mail is there) – and if we allow that kind of trick I like seeing some new ones rather than just a small list of clue-writing clichés.
I couldn’t see the wordplay for evangelicals at all so thanks for the explanation.
The only word I didn’t know was PLANTAIN LILY, and that was my first one in! How weird is that?
I think the only crypticness in 7 is the possibility of reading it as one statement and not dividing it at the comma. It’s just about possible to see UNSUITABLE as a valid answer too, if you think of Vikram Seth’s A Suitable Boy.
tricky tuesday puzzle
Tom B.
I agree about the failure to mark the Darwin anniversary.
But the two crossword editors have assured me by e-mail that this all happened entirely by accident.