Solving time: 12 minutes
Now here’s a Monday offering. My time was a personal best, as I madly biffed without hesitation, resulting in a completed grid before the end of the first movement. I admit, I had been feeling dull after having a go at Anax’s little Sunday offering, but this one got me back into a little more positive view of my solving abilities.
Music: Beethoven, Symphony #3, Jochum/LSO
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | TRIMESTER, TRIM + EST[h]ER, or maybe [h]ESTER, either one will work. |
| 6 | SUPER, double definition, where ‘wicked’ has its slang sense of ‘excellent’. |
| 9 | UNAWARE, UN(A WAR)E. |
| 10 | ANAGRAM, definition by example, with EAST GRINSTEAD and ITS GREAT DANES as the sample anagram. |
| 11 | AMPLE, A(M.P.)LE |
| 13 | TRICKSTER, T[-e,+RICK)STER, a rather complicated substitution clue with an eminently biffable answer. |
| 14 | IMPECCANT, I MP (E.C) CAN’T. One of the few where you might need the cryptic, particularly if the answer is not on the tip of your brain. |
| 16 | ENVY, ENV[o]Y, one we’ve seen before. |
| 18 | DIRK, KI(R)D backwards, ditto. |
| 19 | TECHNICAL, anagram of CLAN ETHIC. |
| 22 | CHEQUERED, CHE(QU)ERED. |
| 24 | OFLAG, O + FLAG, not a very specific definition. Something like ‘old stone where there are no men’ would have made it harder. |
| 25 | BEGONIA, BEG ON + backwards A1. |
| 26 | TANGELO, T(A N GEL)O, where the container is our old friend OT backwards. |
| 28 | LATTE, hidden in [mea]L AT TE[aroom]. This made me think “we haven’t had ‘lathi’ for a while, I wonder when that’s going to show up.” |
| 29 | HERBARIUM, HER BARIUM. |
| Down | |
| 1 | TSUNAMI, T.S. + UN AMI. |
| 2 | IDA, sounds like EIDER if you happen not to be rhotic. |
| 3 | EVANESCE, EVAN(E)S + C.E. At first I though the Welshman was Evan alone, which made the cryptic impossible to parse. |
| 4 | TRENT, T(R)ENT. |
| 5 | REALISTIC, RE ALI’S TIC. |
| 6 | SPARKS, [fixe]S (PARK) [light]S. |
| 7 | PURITANICAL, anagram of PAIR IN A CULT. |
| 8 | REMARRY, R.E. + MAR RY, a compendium of cryptic cliches. |
| 12 | PAPERWEIGHT, PAPER (W[ood]) EIGHT. |
| 15 | AFTERMATH, A F TERM AT H. |
| 17 | INSOMNIA, anagram of A MINION’S. |
| 18 | DECIBEL, L (BE) ICED upside-down. |
| 20 | LEG ROOM, LE GROOM. The English word ‘groom’, meaning a bridesman, is an assimilation of O.E. ‘guma’, a cognate of Latin ‘homo’, into another, unrelated word. |
| 21 | QUINCE, [e]QUIN(C[ultivated])E. My LOI, I had to think quickly to finish. |
| 23 | DETER, RE(T[own’s])ED upside-down. |
| 27 | ELI, [r]ELI[c], where R.C. is what is removed. |
15dn reminded me to get a copy of the album, perhaps the best from the Stones pre-Exile. Also reminded me that it led R. Starkey to suggest that (what would become) Revolver should be titled After Geography.
Oh and a slight pedantic quibble re 16ac. “The Lord thy God” is by no means “envious”.
Edited at 2016-05-23 01:27 am (UTC)
(I wouldn’t like you to be envious of my capacity for punctuation.)
We learned that at our various Wirral grammar schools.
No?
Now you mention it, I don’t think that in all my 20ish years of education any teacher ever talked to me about English grammar. Not a single mention of a gerund or an adverb ever passed their lips. Thinking abut it further, it is doubtful how many would have recognised one anyway.
And now I see I had OSLAG as well, so actually this was a bit of a trainwreck. But yes, very Mondayish, even for a Monday.
Thanks setter and Vinyl.
Edited at 2016-05-23 02:28 am (UTC)
Not often I beat a Times competitor, though, so I’d probably milk a dairymaid if you put one in front of me right now.
True, but not enough can be a bit dodgy too, as any dairymaid who’s tried to milk a bull can testify.
I enjoyed this one mostly as a confidence-booster in the area of trusting both my working and my feeling of “that’s got to be it” with DNKs, in this case HERBARIUM, OFLAG, TANGELO and IMPECCANT. I think it’s lucky I’m still making sure I’ve thought everything through, otherwise 29 would very likely have been written in as HERBALISM before I got ELI, and 6d would have been SPARKY.
I remember being dejected when I first started doing cryptics, looking at the solutions to the previous day’s puzzle and thinking, “but I’ve never even heard of half these words! I just don’t have the vocabulary for this cryptic lark!”
Edited at 2016-05-23 11:10 am (UTC)
Nice to be back…
I enjoy a fast time occasionally but prefer a toughie so thanks to those who have mentioned Sunday above. I tend not to do Sunday’s just because the ipad interface is so bad (why on earth have a different interface to the rest of the week thus more IT maintenance?) but I’ll make a point of going back to yesterday’s.
For the former I took “European con man” to be the def so was trying to create a Brexit campaigner by putting a word for wrench in trier. For sparks I wanted to put N (electrician finally) in a reversal of a word for lights to get a recreational area.
Old iris in brass container.
Overtire, perhaps, as German can.
Thank you blogger for opening my eyes.
Alan
I managed to get all of this correct having guessed Oflag, Impeccant and Tangelo with some confidence. The clues in this were a bit more grown-up but it’s rare for me to complete one of these in under an hour. So I am very chuffed. David
University terms are trimesters in the US, but they are semesters in Germany and there are only two each year. But I prefer what semester means in Swedish: vacation (or the kind of holiday one goes on but doesn’t necessarily celebrate, for Brits). Actually, for German speakers Swedish has lots of other amusing words: gift is poison in Germany but means married in Swedish (but free in Swedish is unmarried in German), what is oil in Germany is beer in Sweden and for that matter, petrol in Germany is booze in Sweden. My favourite is “meaning” and its Swedish and German cognates: “mening” usually means intention, but “Meinung” means opinion, and all of this can lead to interesting misunderstandings.
Edited at 2016-05-23 07:26 pm (UTC)
I fully understand hydrochoos’ observation that petrol in Germany is booze in Sweden. It’s those long, depressing winters.