Yesterday, I read the clues twice and could not get started and when I finally managed to squeeze out the last answer, the sun was high in the sky … such was its degree of difficulty to me. It was thus with a great deal of trepidation and apprehension that I approached today’s puzzle which I have to blog. It was such a pleasant surprise to get all the answers rolling off easily in about 30 minutes. Phew!
ACROSS
1 CIVIL LAW Cha of CI (Channel Islands) VILLA (landed property) W (with)
9 ADAM’S ALE Ins of AMS (alternate letters of ALMOST) in A DALE (valley)
10 rha deliberately omitted
11 HITCHING POST A tichy clue which works on being hitched meaning a horse being tied to a post by a stable hand (groom) or a man (groom) about to be married to a woman by a registrar of marriages
13 UTOPIA *(OUT) + ins of I in PA (Pennsylvania, US state) for the book by Thomas More about the ideal place to be
14 UNPOETIC Rev of CITE (name) OP (opus, work) NU (Greek character)
15 TRACHEA Discretion dictates that I leave interpretation of homophone clues to natives
16 GRASS UP *(SUGAR’S Pallet) this term is new to me; meaning to inform on or shop
20 ADJUSTER AD (Rev of District Attorney, lawyer) JUSTER (more just, fairer)
22 PRELIM P (pressure) + rev of MILER (runner)
23 A PIECE OF CAKE Quite self-explanatory term for something easy, a cinch, a pushover, a picnic, a piece of piss, etc
25 ACRE Ins of R (last letter of dinner) in ACE (one)
26 TRANSACT Ins of RANSACK (loot) minus K in T & T (first letters of thieves & temporarily)
27 SCREENED Ins of East & North (or N & E, points on the compass) in SCREED (writing)
DOWN
2 Anagram of TAILORED deliberately omitted
3 IN THE PICTURE I am aware that I can see Tom Cruise in Top Gun
4 LAST NAME LAST (the last is after all others) NAME (call)
5 WASHOUT A washout is the opposite of success
6 CATNIP C (cold) + rev of PINTA (slang for a pint of milk) hairy aromatic perennial herb having whorls of small white purple-spotted flowers in a terminal spike; used in the past as a domestic remedy; strongly attractive to cats
7 DADO DAD (father, pop) O (round) the cubic block forming the body of a pedestal; a deep border of wood along the lower part of the walls of a room, often merely represented by wallpaper or painting, etc.
8 DEATH CAP *(HATED) + CAP (explosive)
12 PRESS RELEASE PRESS (squeeze) RE (on) L (pound) EASE (relief)
15 TEA PARTY Ins of APART (split) in TEY (rev of YET, still)
17 REPEATER RE (Royal Engineers, servicemen) + ins of A in PETER (safe)
18 UNIVERSE Ins of NI VER (rev of REV, minister) IN (during) in USE (service)
19 PROFITS PROF (professor, head of faculty) IT’S (of Information Technology)
21 THEBAN Ins of BA (Bachelore of Arts) in THEN (subsequently) for a citizen of Thebes in Boeotia, in ancient Greece
24 IVAN DIVAN (bed) minus first letter, D
++++++++++++++
Key to abbreviations
dd = double definition
dud = duplicate definition
tichy = tongue-in-cheek type
cd = cryptic definition
rev = reversed or reversal
ins = insertion
cha = charade
ha = hidden answer
*(FODDER) = anagram
The two senses of ‘groom’ are due to an intersting assimilation. It was originally the bride’s guma, the woman’s man, where ‘guma’ is cognate with Latin ‘homo’. When ‘guma’, and for that matter ‘haleth’ and ‘beorn’, dropped out of the language, they didn’t know what to make of ‘brideguma’, and assimilated it to ‘groom’.
In my books, under 30 minutes is easy and over an hour is difficult.
UNPOETIC was my LOI. I think REPEATER may have given more trouble had it not turned up only a couple of days ago.
Like vinyl1, I thought I had come to the wrong blog when I saw a time from Uncle Yap. Whatever next? Demands from Jimbo for more dead poets?
Edited at 2013-02-07 07:05 am (UTC)
Edited at 2013-02-07 07:09 am (UTC)
It took me ages to put in PROFITS: I was sure “head of faculty” was F and couldn’t figure out the wordplay, unsurprisingly.
Is A PIECE OF CAKE “not much to eat”? Surely it depends on who’s cutting it.
Hold ups: LOFT, because the only thing that’s above the (loft) room at the top of my house is the roof;
TRACHEA, Because I was deceived into trying to work out what the Aldgate area was, and thinking how unfair that was to those who know not London – the homophone works for me;
REPEATER, because I know “safe” is always “peter” but I was looking for service(clergy)men beginning with R;
LAST NAME, because having just put in HITCHING POST, I thought it was the (bugle) call LAST POST and smith is a job like many others.
CoD to HITCHING POST: a neat piece of credible prose with that touch of wit and mischief.
Edited at 2013-02-07 09:14 am (UTC)
I enjoyed UY’s description of meandering all over the place whilst solving and extracting maximum pleasure from the puzzle. Very much my own attitude although somewhat tempered these days.
Agree with HITCHING POST as CoD.
Edited at 2013-02-07 11:19 am (UTC)
Trachea works fine for me and I thought that was a super clue – so too Transact.
24D raised a smile because my Bulgarian colleague’s called Ivan.
28 minutes with bacon sandwich. Thanks setter, and Uncle Yap.
Chris.
Ended with TRANSACT. Managed to get REPEATER easily, having learnt of this firearm from the recent puzzle. Now the challenge is to use it out of Crosswordland…
But then again, I’ve never really understood why some folk get so hot under the choler about such things …