Solving time: 30:34
Several nice clues stand out today. I liked 7, 10, 13 & 26 in particular. Anyway, it’s late, I’m tired, and I think my laptop is dying, so I’d better get on with it while I still can!
cd = cryptic def., dd = double def., rev = reversal, homophones are written in quotes, anagrams as (–)*, and removals like this
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | INCIDENTAL MUSIC = (ADULT IN CINEM |
| 9 | OVERSIGHT – dd |
| 10 | NIX ON – ‘Nix’ can mean nothing, so ‘nix on’ is nothing on, hence the empty diary |
| 11 | DAPPER = REP + PAD all rev |
| 12 | A + D(HE’S)IVE |
| 13 | REMIND = D after RE + MIN |
| 15 | ATLANTIS = TA rev + (STALIN)* – I’m not sure about ‘continent’ as a definition, but I guess the ? makes it OK. |
| 18 | SUNCREAM – cd – you wouldn’t put it on nightly. On edit: There is wordplay here also, it’s CREAM (best) after SUN (daily) – Thanks to both aloo2 & keriothe for pointing this out. |
| 19 | SIGN UP = PUN |
| 21 | GAS MAINS = GAINS about (AS + M) |
| 23 | MERCER – hidden |
| 26 | VOILA = VA (Virginia) is full of OIL – a very imaginative clue & my COD. |
| 27 | REPOTTING = E |
| 28 | AN + T(H)ONY + TROLLOP + E – Not entirely sure about the wordplay, but I think ‘pro’ is being used as a term for prostitute, hence TROLLOP |
| Down | |
| 1 | IN ORDER – dd |
| 2 | CHEEP = “CHEAP” |
| 3 | DISCERNER = DIR about (SCENER |
| 4 | NIGH |
| 5 | ANTIDOTE = A + NOTE about TID – I worked briefly in a chemists so I had no problem with TID. Doctors use it as shorthand on prescriptions for ‘three times a day’, from the Latin ‘ter in die’ |
| 6 | MAN(S)E |
| 7 | SEX KITTEN – dd – to check if a newborn kitten was a male (tom) you’d have to sex it. |
| 8 | CO(N)VEYS – a covey is a small flock of grouse or partridge |
| 14 | MINISKIRT = (I’S + KIR) in MINT |
| 16 | ALIMENTAL = (MEAT IN)* in ALL |
| 17 | MAN + NE + RLY |
| 18 | SEGOVIA = (GOES)* + VIA |
| 20 | PIROGUE – Tartuffe was a religious (PI) rogue in Molière’s play of the same name. A pirogue is a canoe made from a hollowed out log. My LOI and a bit of a guess. |
| 22 | A + LAM |
| 24 | CH + IN + O |
| 25 | SPAR |
There’s a lot of clever stuff here, the pi rogue, the NE railway, the gusher in Virginia. I always fancied being on an oversight committee, so I could fail to find all the problems – ‘Sir, that was an oversight!’
I know the play Tartuffe very well but as I hadn’t heard of the boat it took me a while to work out what was going on. I have met cassis = KIR before but failed to remember it until I had got to the answer by other means. TID was completely new to me.
Your reading of 28 is the same as mine, Dave.
Edited at 2012-06-22 01:15 am (UTC)
Did Tartuffe for A-level French a thousand years ago but still couldn’t see PIROGUE. Thought that was Polish dumplings!
Most of the bottom half, esp the SW on faith. But having squozen a finish, I can see how fine this puzzle is.
The top half went in quickly but I needed MINISKIRT to kick-start the, um, bottom.
I would not have got PIROGUE under competition conditions: lacking anything other than basic knowledge of Tartuffe – Moliere, French farce – I couldn’t get to it that way, and the boat is, shall we say, obscure.
1ac went in without breaking it down, as did CONVEYS.
CoD to SEX KITTEN for general amusement.
I studied Molière for a term at university (and very enjoyable it was too) but it still took me a while to see PIROGUE. The boat has appeared before.
Edited at 2012-06-22 11:12 am (UTC)
The clue for VOILA was original and very clever, wasn’t it? My last one in was MANNERLY; for some reason the abbreviation RLY always eludes me, and I invariably end up going through a mental list of pre-nationalisation railway companies. (LNER, LMS, etc.)
As I had two blanks at the end. Or technically, I suppose one: it couldn’t be TROLLOPE and ‘paragon’, which was the only word I could fit into 20dn. Now I see PIROGUE, I do think it’s vaguely familiar.
VOILA, CONVEYS and ALAMO without full understanding of wordplay.
Many thanks to Dave for sorting it all out.
Best wishes for the w/e, everyone!
Enigma
Though with 3 guesses:
didn’t see trollop;
embarrassingly failed to parse sex kitten;
and vaguely knew pirogue as a boat from previous crosswords but knew tartuffi only as Italian truffles, or a similar-looking Australian chocolate ice-cream. My knowledge of French literature in general, Moliere in particular is zero. Or perhaps less than zero.