Solving time: 36 minutes
A rather vanilla puzzle, this one should not have been much of a challenge. However, a serious mental lapse held me up in the NW corner; although 1 down specifically cross-references 22 down, I was looking at 22 across! You’ll never have a fast time that way.
Music: Trees, Garden of Jane Delawney
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | CHEESY, double definition, where you must resist the temptation to equate ‘on board’ with inside ‘SS’. |
| 4 | BENJAMIN, BEN(JAM)IN. Surprisingly simple, once you find the right literal, and don’t try to use ‘T’ for the first letter. |
| 9 | COUSINS, CO(US)INS. The noble was an English gold coin of the late Middle Ages; if you don’t know that, you may get stuck for a bit. |
| 11 | COCONUT, double definition, one alluding to the coconut shys at a country fair. |
| 12 | AGENT, double definition, with a secondary meaning of ‘vehicle’. I had spotted that, but I still had to think for a bit to get this, my last in. |
| 13 | APPREHEND, double definition |
| 14 | ANTISEPTIC, anagram of PITTANCE IS. I was afraid Dakin’s solution was going to be something terribly obscure, but not so. |
| 16 | NOUS, double definition in Greek and French. |
| 19 | ETUI, [b]E[a]T [m]U[s]I[c]. A staple of US puzzles, where vowels are desperately needed. |
| 20 | GRANDSTAND, jocular cryptic definition. |
| 22 | SPHERICAL, anagram of [cluste]R + HIS PLACE. A globular cluster is an astronomical object, but here it must be broken into its component words. |
| 23 | ALLOW, L.A backwards + LOW. A clever use of ‘on the horizon’, but most solvers will just put it in from the literal. |
| 25 | GNOCCHI, G(NOC + CH)I, where ‘noc’ is ‘con’ backwards, and ‘CH’ is ‘Companion of Honour’, a cryptic mainstay. |
| 26 | YOGHURT, [a]YOG + HURT, i.e. Goya backwards without his final letter. |
| 27 | Omitted, a compendium of chestnuts. |
| 28 | ETCHER, ET(C)HER, easy if you happen to think of ether. |
| Down | |
| 1 | CYCLAMATE, CYCL(A MAT)E. ‘Mat’ is more usually spelt ‘matte’ in the US, but that would not be nearly as useful to constructors, would it? As for the substance, it is famous for being banned in the US and the UK, but not elsewhere. |
| 2 | ELUDE, [p][r]ELUDE. A double letter-removal clue, where at least the letters to remove are clearly specified. |
| 3 | SKITTISH, S(KIT)T + I’S H. A rather elaborate and tricky cryptic. I got stuck because I could not remember what a young fox is called, although I tried to see if ‘kittenish’ would fit. It’s all in the subconscious. |
| 5 | EXCEPTIONALLY, EXCEPTION + ALLY. |
| 6 | Omitted, a very weak clue with distinctive crossing letters. |
| 7 | MINNESOTA, M + INN + E(SO)TA. Easy from the literal, while the cryptic is work. |
| 8 | Omitted, another set of common cryptic elements. |
| 10 | SHARP PRACTICE, double definition, one referring to the famous Thackeray character Becky Sharp. Well, I suppose she’s still famous, you never know nowadays. |
| 15 | TOUCHWOOD, double definition. Surprisingly, touchwood is not literally wood, but ‘dried fungi used as tinder; especially, the Polyporus igniarius’. |
| 17 | SODA WATER, anagram of EASTWARD + O[ne’s]. |
| 18 | ESCARGOT, anagram of GRACES + O[ur] T[ables]. I was afraid the food was going to be something obscure, mais non. |
| 21 | ORACLE, O RAC(L)E. While an oracle did offer advice, ‘adviser’ seems a little weak as a definition. I would expect accurate, if ambiguous, predictions of future events. |
| 22 | SUGAR, RAG US upside down. ‘Sugar and spice, and everything nice’….we hope. |
| 24 | LAUGH, LA + UGH. I nearly put ‘dough’, imagining an esoteric meaning of ‘chuckle’. |
ORIGIN late 16th cent.: diminutive of Jock ‘ordinary man; a rustic,’ Scots form of the given name Jack. The word came to mean [mounted courier,] hence the current sense (late 17th cent.). Another early use [horse dealer] (long a byword for dishonesty) probably gave rise to the verb sense [manipulate,] whereas the main verb sense probably relates to the behavior of jockeys maneuvering for an advantageous position during a race.
But my downfall was the NW (I wonder if this is what you meant in your intro, sotira, as you say NE but cite 1dn as a problem for you). I had SHARP, ANTISEPTIC and ETUI in that corner but was stuck for ages trying to get another foothold. It didn’t help that the only two artificial sweeteners I could think of were ‘saccharine’ which didn’t fit (but could I be sure of its spelling?) and ‘aspartame’ which did.
My access and navigation problems on LJ are still not resolved. I wish I were not alone in having these. LJ support request placed on Friday and auto-acknowledged but I’ve still had no other response.
Thanks, vinyl, in particular for the full wordplay for GNOCCHI and MINNESOTA. Enjoyable blog and enjoyable challenge overall.
I didn’t know CYCLAMATE and wanted it to be aspartame for a while. I didn’t have a clue about Dakin but worked it out from the fodder and crossers.
My first thought for 4ac was that little-known term for a tribal leader YEMJAMEN. If you asked me to place Benin on a map I’d struggle but fortunately even I know that Yemen isn’t west of Nigeria.
For some reason not associated with my usual grasp of geography, I placed Nigeria in my mind’s eye as being on the western bulge of Africa, and was therefore thinking in Atlantis terms for anything further west. Tenerife, maybe. For similar reasons, MANITOBA (spelt wrong, and not a state, of course, was my first shot at 7d.
CoD to COCONUT, for the “shy occupier” definition, which if it didn’t make me laugh, at least made me chuckle – are the two really synonymous?
On a personal note, the main reason for distraction this morning is that my wife is in today for amputation surgery, which makes me feel (and perhaps look like) the guy in the joke on his way to the golf course who tips his hat to his wife’s passing funeral cortège. I’m taking it a bit more seriously than that!
Incidentally, those who haven’t had a go at Saturday’s Jumbo should. There’s some very fancy cluework to be found.
… 1, 9, 12. Should have managed the two cross clues, but am not surprised I didn’t get CYCLAMATE. Otherwise fairly straightforward, despite being unfamiliar with either Mr Dakin or Ms Sharp.
Best wishes to Mrs z8b8d8k, hope all goes well.
I confess I for one didn’t even query this. I just thought “kit must be another term for a fox cub” and moved on.
Thoughts and best wishes very much with Z8 and his good lady.
Jack, if your isp solve your access problem and can explain it to you i would be interested to hear sometime what caused it
But mysteriously LJ is now working correctly for the first time in 4 days so I don’t know whether they found a problem and fixed it or possibly resting and rebooting my router has done the trick. I had already rebooted a couple of times over the weekend to no effect. If I find out anything more from my ISP I’ll let you know. I was very impressed that they were supportive as I thought they might have taken the view that it was my problem not theirs.
Liked ver much GNOCCHI, YOGHURT and SPHERICAL.