Solving time: 29:54 …
… but not with full understanding of all answers; in particular 24dn which required my phone-a-friend option. Thanks again! Now I have to say that I didn’t like this puzzle much. It brought to mind the expression ‘let the dog see the rabbit’. Far too many puns for me and not enough wordplay to go on. No doubt there will be others who really enjoyed it. That’s how these things are.
| Across |
| 1 |
GUBBINS. Reverse your BUG; then BINS. Never heard this to mean ‘rubbish’. More like ‘kit’ or ‘the makings’ as in roll-your-own. |
| 5 |
MOBSTER. Get your {gu}N from MONSTER; replace with a B for ‘British’. |
| 9 |
ROUGH,CAST. Enough said? |
| 10 |
STOIC. This is SIC with OT reversed inside. He of Citium; not the Eleatic of arrow fame. |
| 11 |
BIRDS NEST SOUP. The Wik tells me: “A few species of swift, the cave swifts, are renowned for building the saliva nests used to produce the unique texture of this soup”. Culinary advice: don’t mistake a Welcome Swallow for a Cave Swift! |
| 13 |
HA,RE,BELL. |
| 15 |
Omitted. |
| 17 |
ENTAIL. Anagram: late in. A technical legal term meaning “a settlement of the inheritance of property over a number of generations so that it remains within a family or other group”. |
| 19 |
FROG-SPIT. GO reversed in FR’s PIT. Used by the French to make 11ac. |
| 22 |
THE OLD HEAVE-HO. First two from ‘elderly folk’. Then HAVE inc {us}E & HO for ‘house’. |
| 25 |
INDIA{na}. Another spot of humour I could have done without. |
| 26 |
REFASHION. Anagram: IRON SAFE inc H. |
| 27 |
GREATLY. AT & L{arge} inside GREY. |
| 28 |
LIMP,OP,O. It‘s gre(atl)y green and greasy. [O for ‘over’?] |
| Down |
| 1 |
GARB{o}. Film star who, every Thursday morning, takes away my gubbins. I sometimes take the time to greet her. |
| 2 |
Omitted. Another pun. |
| 3 |
ICHOR. Promote the I in CHOIR. |
| 4 |
SPARSELY. S{catter} and PARSLEY with EL replacing LE. |
| 5 |
MATTER. See 2dn. |
| 6 |
BE,SETTING. |
| 7 |
TWOSOME. WO (Warrant Officer) and S inside TOME. Well, I suppose there are two of them. |
| 8 |
RECUPERATE. RE-RATE including E and CUP. |
| 12 |
SHOESTRING. Two meanings … again! |
| 14 |
BRILLIANT. BRIAN & T for ‘temperature’, inc. ILL. |
| 16 |
DREADFUL. One more pun: cf ‘Penny Dreadful’. |
| 18 |
TREADLE. And again; this time the pun is on ‘sole’. Chambers, at least, also allows TREDDLE. |
| 20 |
PRO,VISO{r}. |
| 21 |
WHERRY. WHY inc. ER (ruler, the Queen) and R for ‘river’. The barge she sat in …? |
| 23 |
EPSOM. Hidden, reversed. |
| 24 |
INFO. This is the one I couldn’t see at first. It turns out to be ‘in for’ (about to suffer, as in ‘You’re in for it’) minus its last letter. |
Thanks to McT and McT’s mate for the gen on info.
Edited at 2012-05-23 04:32 am (UTC)
Diligent fans of ‘Downton Abbey’ will know all about ENTAIL which nicety of law was responsible for the premise on which the whole of the first season was constructed. No such subtleties were employed when plotting the subsequent series.
I suppose it might be seen as a case of sour grapes if I say I didn’t like this puzzle but since mct has said it already I shall agree with him anyway. I really disliked 7dn but I can’t fault the other clues. Individually they are rather fine in their way but simply too much of a good thing, all together in one puzzle.
On edit, I forgot to say I also didn’t know the required meaning of GUBBINS. The Oxfords don’t recognise it either but Collins and Chambers have it.
Edited at 2012-05-23 05:41 am (UTC)
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/gubbins
My best synonym would be “stuff”.
What is this new ‘Comment Form’ that now comes up when one clicks ‘Reply’? Is there an option to turn it off and revert to the normal ‘Reply’ screen?
But now it seems to have gone away again.
Try it and see how you go.
FROG-SPIT was a guess on the lines of cuckoo spit from cryptic, GUBBINS reluctantly entered, because in my obviously limited book it would never mean rubbish – it’s a Barnes Wallis sort of word. For quite a while, GARBAGE was my favourite, influenced, no doubt, by the only other clue I had in for the first minutes.
I only knew one Zeno, he of the paradox. Apparently there are two others who were STOICs, and for all I know, dozens more. It fitted and nothing else does.
INFO is (in my opinion), only understandable once someone else tells you how it works- then it’s fine.
I thought TWOSOME quite clever, and it’s my CoD.
I’d rather definitions erred on the side of looseness than dictionarial, with the possible exception of 7d, which is so loose it seems to have fallen off. As for INFO, I had to have a very long think about how it worked and I’ve never heard GUBBINS used in a sentence or even so much as a phrase. I shall make a point of injecting it regularly into conversations henceforth, since it appears to mean anything you care to want it to mean. COD to TREADLE, me being a sucker for a pun.
I had to spend ten minutes with the dictionary after I’d finished, just checking some of the definitions. GUBBINS to me is what you find when you open up some unfamiliar device or piece of machinery. “Let’s take the back off and poke about with the gubbins in here.”
Similarly with FROG SPIT, which I always called cuckoo spit as a child; and what is the “floating” doing in the clue?
There are a couple of clues where a word serves double duty, which is unusual for The Times, isn’t it? In 7 down “Sergeant Major” is both the definition and the WO; and in 14 down “nursing ailment” signifies ILL and indicates placing ILL inside BRIAN. Or am I making heavy weather of this?
Sorry, seem to be going on a bit this morning; must not have enough to do!
Thank you also for enlightening me on FROG SPIT. Perhaps each pond should have one of those notices we used to see on buses: Spitting Strictly Prohibited.
I’m not sure about “Jones’s place” in 25. The character is named after George Lucas’s dog.
Edited at 2012-05-23 03:28 pm (UTC)
Last in: WHERRY, which rang a faint bell (from Dickens?). Shamefully, I spent quite a while trying to justify SHERRY, an excess of which I thought might be a reason for having to cart a monarch around in a boat. Sorry, Ma’am.
I did not find the puzzle unfair; it is well within the limits of allowable style. Since I had never heard of ‘gubbins’ in any sense, I didn’t have a problem with it.
I think the wherry is the tradional boat of choice on the Norfolk Broads as Woodforde’s Wherry, one of the finest ales known to man, is brewed thereabouts.
Funny old puzzle as most others have said. Almost as if the setter was trying just a bit too hard to be clever and witty and falling slightly flat most of the time. I associate Zeno with stoicism so no problem there but don’t really like 7D, a Warrant Officer and a son hardly describes a TWOSOME.
GUBBINS and LIMPOPO from wordplay. Last in was SHOESTRING. Tricky offering, but fun.
The various states of the US abolished entail early on, one of the reasons the US was (back then) the most egalitarian society (for whites) on earth.