I had hoped for an easy ride, doing this in my bed still recovering from the scary op; it was not to be. Either this was difficult, or the anaesthetic has obliterated a few more little grey cells. I have amended the blog to explain / correct the two down clues which had foxed me – 2d and 20d – so thanks to the commenters below. [And added 12a which I had blogged but somehow deleted from the HTML].
| Across |
| 1 |
TORQUE – Def. force, sounds like ‘talk’ if you are one of those talkers. I think ‘talk’ has more of an ‘aw’ and ‘torque’ more of an ‘or’ to it, but at least it was an easy clue to get us going. |
| 5 |
BOIL OVER – B (bachelor) O (old) I (one) LOVER (girlfriend maybe); def. get too passionate. |
| 9 |
MAKE TRACKS – Make = model, tracks = railway; def. set out. |
| 10 |
TOSH – TO SH! = noisy person told to be quiet; def. rubbish. |
| 11 |
BILE DUCT – (LE CID BUT)*; def. vital passage. |
| 12 |
LUNACY – UN (local, French ‘one’) inside LACY = decorative material; def. folly. |
| 13 |
OAHU – Alternate letters of nOt A sHrUb; Pacific island, in Hawaii. |
| 15 |
SUNCREAM – SUN = paper; CREAM = flower, the best of something, as Jimbo points out. I’ve been had by this ‘flower’ notion before, I should have remembered, as in ‘Flower of Scotland’. Nothing to do with cream as a liquid. |
| 18 |
POMPIDOU – POMP = ceremony, DOU(R) = endlessly gloomy, insert I (one); def. President. |
| 19 |
OGRE – An OGRE is a giant. OG is own goal = blunder by one defending, and RE is teaching religion. |
| 21 |
TAI CHI – TA (volunteers); CH (check) in I I (a couple of Latin); def. exercises. |
| 23 |
RED-BRICK – RE(A)D = studied, with ‘not A’; BRICK = reliable colleague; def. college type. |
| 25 |
KILN – Def. baker. Hidden reversed in ‘workmaNLIKe. |
| 26 |
IN ONES CUPS – (NON-PC ISSUE)*; def. more than happy. |
| 27 |
ANNOUNCE – N (note), NOUN (what’s often proper), inside ACE (fine); def. give out. |
| 28 |
TASMAN – TAS = thank yous, expressions of gratitude, MAN = crew; def. old navigator. Abel Tasman was the Dutch chap who was first to what is now Tasmania, and Fiji, my favourite place on the globe. |
| Down |
| 2 |
OKAPI – Def. ‘African leaves fancier’; a relative of the giraffe (that I did know). Apparently IPA is a sort of beer – Indian Pale Ale – of which I’d never heard, being a long time exile; and KO is put out, all reversed. |
| 3 |
QUEUE-JUMP – QUEUE sounds like CUE = prompt, JUMP = start; def. advance position unfairly. |
| 4 |
EARFUL – TEARFUL = visibly upset, remove the head; def. reprimand. |
| 5 |
BACK TO SQUARE ONE – (CAN REQUEST A BOOK)*; def. starting all over. |
| 6 |
INSOLENT – IN SOLENT would be in the Channel by the Isle of Wight; def. fresh, as in cheeky. |
| 7 |
OPT IN – OP = surgery; TIN = can; def. be involved voluntarily. |
| 8 |
EASY CHAIR – EASY = piece of cake; CHA = tea; I R (start to relax); def. &lit. |
| 14 |
ADORATION – A DO = a party, RATION = helping; def. enormous respect. |
| 16 |
ROOF RACKS – ROO sounds like RUE = regret; FRACKS = attempts to extract fuel; def. car parts. Topical, if a little groan-worthy. |
| 17 |
ADDITION – ADDICTION (habit) has C (cycles initially) removed; def. rider. |
| 20 |
ODDEST – ODE = lines, insert D (duke), add ST = street; more than ‘stranger’ would be ‘strangest’, or oddest. Don’t know why I couldn’t see this first time round. |
| 22 |
CONGO – CON (against) GO is a reason not to pass; def. African runner, the river. |
| 24 |
CAPRA – CAP = limit; RA = artist; def. film director, Frank Capra and his offspring Jnr. |
Pip, OKAPI .. IPA is a type of beer, and to KO is to put out (someone’s lights, I guess). 20d is ODDEST … Duke inside ODE and Street.
Last in TOSH.
20 is ODDEST (stranger) ODE (lines) and ST (street) “taking in” D for Duke.
Oh and 20 mins to solve so quite tricky.
A nice puzzle I thought with some excellent “lift and separate” needed to arrive at parsings and definitions. 20 minutes to solve
20d is ODDEST, not ADVERT: “D” (Duke) in “ODE” (lines) and then ST for street. ODDEST beats ODDER (i.e. Stranger).
…at least that’s what I made them but other wiser heads may know otherwise.
And good luck with the recuperation.
Edited at 2015-01-28 09:30 am (UTC)
I seem to remember a Coleman balls collection where a commentator said that a player’s left foot was his best. Cue cartoon of bloke with three feet.
LOI: RED BRICK, as I was convinced a ‘reliable colleague’ would be a ‘rock’.
Speaking of homophones.I had to cool my heels in a doctor’s office yesterday and was catching up on some old NY Times puzzles and came across this:
Clue: Trash/Victories/Get it?/Do some math/Runs. Answer: Junk/wins/see/add/hums. AKA John Quincy Adams (the theme being US presidents). And there were 4 others like it that I’ll spare you. 20.20
For any IPA drinkers I’d recommend the Meantime IPA, though at 7.4% best stick to just the one!
I liked the chestnut flavoured refugee from a Christmas cracker in INSOLENT.
I think homophones are more fun when they are groanworthy. I don’t really pronounce ROO and RUE the same, though I’d make little distinction between TORQUE and TALK
But then I recently produced a pictorial version of “When I’m 64” including “…if it’s not too dear” rendered by images of an E-fit, an endearing snotty baby, and two stags. “We shall skrimp and save” was a weasel, a shrimp, a plus sign and somebody shaving.
Edited at 2015-01-28 12:47 pm (UTC)
At 2d I had Omani. Putting aside the fact that The Oman isn’t even in Africa (thanks phmfantom) I artfully constructed it from a reversed inamorata (fancier) without the world famous Rata beer, with “leaves” as, um, padding.
Wait, there’s more.
At 22 I plumped for the river Cango (it’s where they get the water from to make Rata beer) on the basis that if you “can go” in, say, dominoes, scrabble or myriad card games, you obviously don’t pass.
Apart from that, Mrs Lincoln, my time wasn’t at all shabby and I thought the puzzle was absolutely top drawer.
COD to OGRE. Comment of the day to Penfold.
Thanks setter and blogger.
The pronunciation ascribed to ‘torque’ is interesting. Evidently, the non-rhotic speakers have to do something with the terminal r they suppress, and they’re always popping up in the middle of words.
I am surprised how many people have no heard of IPA. In the days of the British Raj, it was a beer that was brewed stronger than usual (like 5.5% I think) and with extra hops (they are a preservative as well as adding bitterness) so it would survive the sea-voyage to India.
These days on this side of the US we have what is known as West Coast IPA which is typically insanely strong (9%) and insanely bitter.
Nice puzzle all round.
My last in was OKAPI, and it’s indicative of the general style: two well-hidden definitions for the price of one.
No problem with IPA: the Sierra Nevada Brewing Company’s version is my current house beer. Now I want one. Mmmm… hops… Edit: having got home and taken one from the fridge it turns out it’s not an IPA at all, just a pale ale. Ah well, it still tastes good.
Edited at 2015-01-28 11:01 pm (UTC)
posted 28/01/15 22:16
QUOTE >
Thank you MartnP. I didn’t know about TftT. My first Google said it meant tweeting from the toilet!
“
:-))
I’d have knocked a minute or three off if I’d been brave enough to bung in my first thoughts, but I made terribly heavy weather of parsing several clues, particularly 10ac (TOSH), 19ac (OGRE) and 2dn (OKAPI) – though, with hindsight, they all look pretty straightforward.
Once again my compliments to the setter.
Edited at 2015-01-29 07:38 am (UTC)
Rob