Times 26,093: Pangram Denied

Oh go on then, I might as well post this now, given that I’m still up and watching that which must not be mentioned on TV.

I stopped the clock on this very serviceable puzzle at 8:54 – not quite fast enough to achieve my quixotic goal of a <10m Mon-Fri average time, I don’t think, but pretty close, pretty close. As the grid started to fill up with Zs, Qs, Vs and Ws I felt sure we must be in for a pangram, but fine-toothed combing has so far failed to turn up a J – I think they do it just to tease us!

Not much specialist vocabulary or obscure knowledge required here – I suppose ODALISQUE could be deemed a bit exotic, but I did know it (relevant to my interests perhaps?) OLOGY at 22D raised a smile and induced fond reveries involving dear old Maureen Lipman. I did do an unusual amount of biffing, 3D in particular and the top half of 4D, but it all turned out alright on the night.

Anyhow, back to just a little more anguished autopsying of e**t p**ls before I give up and go to bed. Thank you setter for a landslide win for fine cluing, and I’ll see the rest of you, somewhat groggily I’m sure, at some point tomorrow…

Across
1 KISS OF LIFE – first-aid: LI [lithium] “injected into” KISS-OFF [cold shoulder] + E [drug]
6 WOLF – bolt: FLOW reversed [flood “pulled back”]
10 THEREOF – from that: THE REF [the judge] “gathers” O [nothing]
11 ON THE GO – active: {m}ONTH [a few weeks “to dismiss leader”] followed by EGO [I]
12 HERBIVORE – HE + (RIB OVER*) [“to cook”]; and a herbivore would turn up their nose at cooked rib
13 CATCH – double def: come down with / hook
14 SNIPE – double def: from a safe distance, shoot / bird
15 FLY-TIPPER – filthy criminal: FLIPPER [part of seal] “covering” initials of {Y}obbo and {T}erribly
17 OUTRIGGER – boat’s framework: TRIGGER [set off] by casing of O{rmol}U
20 GUPPY – fish: PUG reversed [dog “returns”] with gutted P{re}Y
21 GROSS – double def: square figure (i.e. 144) / very round (i.e. corpulent)
23 ODALISQUE – subjugated woman: (QUAILED SO*) [“desperate”]
25 BOOTLEG – illegal: BOOT LEG [kick | a supporter]
26 DULLEST – most tedious: DULLES [US airport (Washington DC’s)] + T{erminal} initially
27 GOYA – artist: ending in {povert}Y in GOA [part of India]
28 PAWNBROKER – uncle: (BRAWN*) [“exercising”] during POKER [game]

Down
1 KETCH – boat: wipe UP from KETCHUP [sauce]
2 SPEARMINT – flavour: S PEAR + MINT [small | fruit (with) perfect]
3 ONE-SIZE-FITS-ALL – standard: Z [variable] in (IS IS [“is twice”] LEFT ALONE*) [“working out”]
4 LEFT OFF – ignored: FEL{low} reversed [bloke “not half” “upset”] + TOFF [swell]
5 FLOWERY – decorated with blooms: first of F{ebruary} + LOWER [“maybe cow”, i.e. one that lows] + {parsle}Y finally
7 OVERT – open: {c}O{urse}’s second + VERT [green]
8 FOOLHARDY – reckless: FOOL HARDY [sweet | author]
9 STOCKING FILLER – double def: little present | head of a bank robber, perhaps (as this fills a stocking mask)
14 SPONGE BAG – bathroom item taken away: SPONGE [bum] “sat on” BAG [nail]
16 PIPSQUEAK – nobody: PIP [just beat] + SQUEAK [narrow victory]
18 GEORGIA – double def: (Eurasian) country, (US) state
19 RWANDAN – African: RAN [conducted] carrying WAND [baton]
22 OLOGY – something to study: in {librar}Y GO LO{ok} “up”
24 ESTER – organic compound: {t}ESTER [analyst “skimmed”]

35 comments on “Times 26,093: Pangram Denied”

  1. Pleased after a couple of days of over-exertion to be offered this biffing bonanza. ODALISQUE vaguely remembered from somewhere – a trip to the Middle East, perhaps?

    The last time I voted in the UK general election was in ’87. It seems the main winners tonight are Mhairi Black and the BBC’s exit poll.

    Edited at 2015-05-08 02:35 am (UTC)

  2. I did a bit of biffing myself, although it didn’t get me anywhere near 10′: 3,4, & 14d, and I suppose 9d, since I didn’t get the bank robber part. I also had (have) no idea what a fly-tipper is; off now to Google to find out. The only odalisques I’ve ever seen (paintings, just paintings) were so inviting-looking that ‘subjugated’ actually slowed me down at first; but of course it’s a perfectly appropriate definition. 22d brought to mind Mrs. Gradgrind urging her kids to ‘do something ological’. Ulaca, if you’re going to not vote, I strongly recommend the US Presidential elections.
    1. I am by temper and training a voter, be it council, general or committee. I have been unable to vote in UK elections for nigh on 30 years because of my expat status.

      Having said that, looking ahead a bit, I may well deliver a message of my own on the ballot form at the “election” for the Chief Executive of the HKSAR, which will take place on 1 July 2017, if the democrats here cave in over the next few months and agree to a rigged “universal suffrage” electoral system.

      Without wanting to give too much away stateside wise, I still have the “Anyone but Hillary” button given to me by my electrician pal in Claremont, CA, back in 2003. Plus ca change…

      Edited at 2015-05-08 04:10 am (UTC)

    1. Entomological fly-tipping would be a non-starter due to their six suction-cupped legs giving them an almost unassailable centre of gravity…
  3. Second goof of the week for me, this time an inexplicable FLY-ZIPPER. I’ll be talking to my therapist about that.

    I’m annoyed because FLY-TIPPER is a nice clue, and all the better for kevingregg’s fantastic reimagining of it … cow-tipping for really small people.

    COD … OUTRIGGER. Lovely surface.

    1. My goodness Sotira – I think I’d have kept quiet about that Freudian slip!
  4. Just me then who was nowhere close to getting SNIPE. I didn’t know it as a safe distance or a bird so given that it is not at all obvious from shoot I had little hope of getting it! I went for SMILE in the vain hope that it was S for safe and MILE for distance and that shooting the bird could mean smiling even though it sounded more like a rude gesture.
    1. Forgive me if you already have this, but the literal is ‘shoot from a safe distance’, with a bit of inversion.
      1. Thanks ulaca. As you rightly surmised I had misread verlaine’s explanation as a triple definition even though he had stated it was a double definition!
        1. It was my LOI if I recall correctly – a deviously phrased double definition indeed.

          Apologies if my “/” notation to separate the constituent parts of a double def isn’t clear enough!

  5. Undone in the end by 14d where vocabulary beat me and 21a in which the last thing I was looking for was yet another dd!

    My only excuse is that I was being thoroughly distracted by the flag-waving film “First of the Few” on the television celebrating VE Day.

  6. Just under 20 minutes of steady stuff with no distractions as I have yet to turn on the radio or TV. Like verlaine, I was thinking pangram but no X either. Played with FLY-POSTER, bringing to mind the unfortunate man Bill Stickers who I read on walls is always about to be prosecuted.

    Edited at 2015-05-08 08:11 am (UTC)

  7. Solid finish to the week.

    Dumped the anagrist into 23ac with the intention of returning to it later. Forgot to return, but it turns out ODALISQUE was as good an arrangement of letters as any. Who knew?

    Like Sotira, I had FLY-ZIPPER, but showed uncharacteristic judgment by taking the time to account for the Z. Never heard of a FLY-TIPPER, but the wordplay was pretty clear.

    Will do it all again next week I suppose. Thanks setter and blogger. Which reminds me Verlaine, sensational week of solving. Well done.

  8. 25 minutes, including a short break, and recovering from the heady events of the night. We rarely get such interesting elections, certainly these days no more than once every five years.
    Felt like a tricky one, but, like yesterday, there were occasional flashes when I tuned into the wavelength.
    I know I’m going to get ribbed for this, but STOCKING FILLER really appealed amongst this decent set of clues. Those of you with retentive memories will know that I referred just yesterday to lingerie’s role in bank-related crime: a future echo perhaps.
    Now back to the serious business of watching 3 party leaders resigning. Or maybe I’ll do the TLS instead.
  9. Heavily distracted by events overnight I solved this in bits and pieces so I have no solving time to offer. I got there eventually without aids but didn’t persevere attempting to parse several biffed answers. Never heard of KISS-OFF.
    1. I do feel that BRUSH-OFF might have been a lot closer to “cold shoulder”… whereas KISS-OFF just sort of kind of works?
  10. ‘toilet’ BAG went in early, and it took some time before I realised that mistake! All others ok, with the unknown ODALISQUE being the most appropriate order of the letters.
  11. I eagerly turned on the coverage at 5p.m. NY time yesterday and saw the exit polls etc. and must admit to some disappointment in the rather static drama (husband said, so that’s it then and went to the gym). We’re used to the great rolling returns as they cross the time zones, with poll closings a patchwork quilt of different times even within the same state. My favourite image from 2012 here was all the fat cats’ private jets stacked up at Logan Airport in anticipation of a wingding celebration of a Romney win – they’d believed the Fox polling.

    Oh yes, the puzzle. 20.16. Slowish because I’d wanted “stuff” in the stocking and I’d stuffed “globe” in for “gross” and had to fix it. Odalisque turns up in the NY Times puzzles fairly often.

    1. This election had a great cold open – “the exit polls say WHAT?!” – but was a bit disappointing thereafter, as confirmation of the expected result trickled steadily in. Perhaps Paddy Ashdown did eventually eat a marzipan hat on air, which would have been worth staying up for, but you can’t guarantee politicians keeping their promises any more, can you…
  12. Nice puzzle, largely straightforward, but with bits of interesting cryptic stuff. I didn’t know the expression ‘kiss off’ either. I had heard of odalisque but wouldn’t have been able to give its meaning before today. 21 took me a bit over the thirty minute mark as I pondered the possibilities, slow to see that a gross is a square number.
  13. SNIPE was my last one in too and I was another who had to change TOILET bag to SPONGE. An interrupted 15 mins ish solve.
  14. 10:02 with GROSS fly-tipping me over the 10-minute barrier.

    Odalisque was one of those words I knew without knowing its precise (or in this case even vague) meaning.

  15. 16 mins. My solve was remarkably biff-free considering some of the above comments. I was held up at the end by the SPONGE BAG/GROSS crossers for no reason other than brain freeze. Like Verlaine (great week of solving by the way) I thought of Maureen Lipman as I entered OLOGY.
  16. 19 mins with 2 inexplicably spent trying to work out my LOI which was GROSS.
  17. Did this one early in the morning and didn’t time it, but it felt like everything locked in about as well as yesterday. Needed the wordplay for FLY-TIPPER (great work) but everything else went in with both parts understood, another really solid puzzle.
  18. About 25 minutes ending with SPONGE BAG/GROSS. I had to look up the SPONGE BAG and the FLY TIPPER afterward because I’d never heard of either. We call the former a ‘toilet kit’, and the latter ‘illegal dumping’. I liked SNIPE, very nice clue. Regards.
  19. No time today as tackled in bits and pieces whilst watching the unmentionable and it’s aftermath. Didn’t much like this offering with doubts over a number of clues:
    Kiss off = cold shoulder? Really? Must be in a part of the country I’ve never visited.
    Why does a sponge bag have to be taken away? Makes as much sense to say ‘left behind’ especially with the bum in the clue.
    Left off – ignored? Again I struggled to find a substitution that worked.
    Dulles = a random non UK airport I should know about?
    And there was more of my own making. Never heard of ESTER – probably should have done – but skimmed had me wanting to take FAT off a word rather than the first letter.
    No doubt these are all perfectly fair to the old hands but didn’t seem so to me!

    Edited at 2015-05-08 06:28 pm (UTC)

    1. Quick Cryptic solvers had an advantage here as ESTER came up on Wednesday:

      Woman housed originally in compound (6)
      ESTHER – H (“Housed originally”) in ESTER (a chemical “compound”).

  20. Oh dear. After the best part of an hour, I bunged in the last two (6ac and 8d) with wildly underadequate reasoning, with predictable results.

    At 8d I had “brotherly”, which was the only thing I could think of that fit the checkers (minus the initial B). I had some vague idea that it equated to “sweet”, but that’s as far as it went. That left me with _O_B for 6ac, for which I had “bomb” because… well, actually my logic was irreasonable and my reasoning was unlogical.

    On the plus side, I luckily picked “ODALISQUE” in preference to the six other permutations that were left open given the checkers. Never heard of it. However, a quick Google image-search reveals that an odalisque was a rather chubby lady paid to lie on couches with tactfully draped gauze over parts of her. At least that’s what all the paintings seem to show. It must have been incredibly frustrating to be an artist in the 18th-19th centuries, what with pieces of gauze falling over the interesting parts of the models every time you turned up.

  21. Oh dear! I went quite briskly through all but three clues, then took a minute or two over SNIPE and finally got completely bogged down with ONE-SIZE-FITS-ALL and GROSS, scraping home in just under the half-hour (29:19 if you must know).

    I completely failed to parse GROSS (my LOI); and – having pretty much lost the will to live – I made two stupid assumptions about O-S-F-A: that the “variable” was going to be Y and that the “standard” was going to be the name of some popular song which I’d probably never heard of.

    KISS-OFF was new to me, and I’d probably have had my doubts about “boat’s framework” = OUTRIGGER if the wordplay had been less clear.

    1. Tony, you don’t know how happy you’ve made some of us who go sub-Sever, if only for one day.
  22. Still baffled by “one size fits all”. I get the variable “z” and the anagram of l+alone+is+is but I’m left with “ef” and “t”. Help please?
  23. Oops….got it! Stupidly bogged down with “l” for “left” instead of using the whole word.

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