Today’s offering began with writing in 1a and 1d, wondering if this was setting some kind of theme for the day (and the crossword). Well, almost, it was; with more slightly distasteful words or negative thoughts cropping up here and there – 24a, 16d, 12a, 20d, for example. But in between are some fine clues and witty definitions, with only one answer (9a) requiring me to check afterwards the secondary meaning of its part. Half an hour at leisure in bed with the tea and toast had it polished off and understood.
| Across |
| 1 |
GOD-AWFUL – (WOULD FAG)*, anagrind ‘chewed’, D ‘taste thus’, or &lit. |
| 5 |
EQUIPS – Insert QUI (French for which) into EPS (records); D supplies. |
| 9 |
UNBURDEN – UN troops have blue berets, and BURDEN is an old word for the refrain or chorus of a song (I had to check this afterwards); D relieve. |
| 10 |
MANTRA – Hidden word in BRAH(MAN TRA)DITION, D it’s said to aid concentration, as in meditation. |
| 12 |
BLIMP – B is Bulging at first, LIMP is sagging, D pompous colonel. |
| 13 |
FOG SIGNAL – FOAL is a young horse; insert G and SIGN = indication, D bang on track? Before the days of radar, and more of a booming noise as I remember from living in Castletown, IOM. and from visiting Portland Bill as a kid. Edit: further research tells me they used explosive caps on railway lines to warn of oncoming trains in fog. So the clue is bang on. |
| 14 |
VARICOSE VEIN – (CIVVIES ARE ON)*, anagrist ‘manoeuvres’, D faulty vessel. I’m not a squeamish chap but I tend to squirm at the sight of these and the notion of them being ‘stripped’ i.e. pulled out by some sadistic medic. |
| 18 |
PUMPERNICKEL – Well, a PUMPER could be someone who grills you for info, and NICKEL is a coin, giving you this sort of bread. |
| 21 |
CASTELLAN – CAN is the cooler, jail, insert STELLA for the girl, D keep chief, a chap who is in charge of a castle. I wanted it to be CUSTODIAN at first but couldn’t make it work, then 4d put paid to the idea. |
| 23 |
GUAVA – GUV for boss, around A, another A; D fruit supplier. |
| 24 |
OTIOSE – O TIE is a love match, insert O’S = rounds; D pointless. A useful word not used enough IMO. |
| 25 |
TEST CASE – Here we have that old favourite where GUY means TEASE; Insert ST and C = carrying, original; TE(ST C)ASE: D suit. |
| 26 |
SIGNET – D a small seal e.g. on a ring, sounds like CYGNET a small swan, a pen being a female swan. |
| 27 |
STOCKING – Double definition, a nice surface which I suspect we’ve seen before in a similar guise. |
| Down |
| 1 |
GRUBBY – GRUB for food, BY = times, multiply by; D needing cleaning. |
| 2 |
DEBRIS – DEB for young lady joining society, RIS = SIR, reversed; D refuse. |
| 3 |
WORKPLACE – (LACK POWER)*, D office. ‘Supply’ not the strongest anagrind, but it works. |
| 4 |
USER-FRIENDLY – (INSURED FLIER)*, anagrind ‘strangely’, D not requiring guide? |
| 6 |
QUASI – QUI(T) = almost leave, insert AS = when, D as it were? Or is it better &lit.? The Q in QANGO or QUANGO. From the Latin, ‘as if’. |
| 7 |
INTENDED – IN = at home, TENDED = looked after; D fiancée. One for the Quickie. |
| 8 |
STARLING – D flier; if you inserted a T (sort of square), you’d get startling, meaning alarming. |
| 11 |
AGE OF CONSENT – (ONE CAN GET SO F)*, the F = fine, D legal term. |
| 15 |
ENERGETIC – CITE G RENE would be ‘commend grand Frenchman’; all reversed (given up); D bubbly. |
| 16 |
SPECIOUS – CEPS are fungi, reversed = SPEC, add I, O, US; D deceptive. |
| 17 |
SMASHING – S for small, MING for porcelain, insert ASH for remains; D beautiful. |
| 19 |
SALAMI – SALA(D) = healthy food, mostly; MI a note, D sausage. |
| 20 |
BAD EGG – BADE = ordered, GG = goods, D villain. |
| 22 |
ENSUE – To ENSURE would be to guarantee, delete the R for king, D come next. |
Thanks setter for the nice long anagrams, and thanks Pip for explaining UNBURDEN.
This meaning of BURDEN came up in December, but I had forgotten it. No other unknowns for me, but not much by way of biffing either, which is an indicator of fine setting in my book. So thanks setter, and blogger as always.
Particularly liked DEBRIS and GOD AWFUL.
I thought this was a cracker with only little unpleasantness with 14ac VARICOSE VEIN(fine anagram setter!)
I was just under forty minutes. FOI 12ac BLIMP quickly followed by 1dn GRUBBY made me think of Sir Grubby Foster and 1ac GOD-AWFUL – made me think of David Bowie.
LOI 6dn QUASI which I originally had in as QUITE until 13ac FOG SIGNAL put me back on track,as it were.
COD GUAVA – tres amusant. WOD 24ac OTIOSE
horryd Shanghai
Edited at 2016-06-08 10:48 am (UTC)
Thank you to setter and blogger.
Edited at 2016-06-08 01:10 pm (UTC)
– With 2 Vs in the fodder and “vessel” in the def 14a has to be something vase.
– “Picked up” in 16d has to be a homophone indicator
– Custodian looks a likely bet for 21a
– Looking at the fodder and “not requiring guide” and enumeration of 4-8, 4d absolutely has to be SELF-something
– The way I’m reading “imported” means that 5a requires putting something inside QUE or QUI.
Unfortunately for those among you with shares in TippexTM I didn’t actually write all of those in (just SELF) but progress on crossing clues was certainly hindered.
I also had trouble unravelling the anagrams. Normally I can resolve them in my head but today my copy of the puzzle is soiled with 4 little jumbles of letters (well 5 actually if you count what was left of the fodder for 4d after I’d removed S E L F.)
My last one in was STARLING, because I had a confident SEAPLANE in until I remembered on final check that this is a cryptic crossword in which the wordplay is also important.
I think the definition in 25a is “original suit”, and the first letter of “carrying” is indicated by “initially”, not “original”.
I made particularly heavy weather of the anagrams, failing to get any of them first time through, and then being so convinced that the first word of 4dn was going to be SELF that I assumed that 1ac wasn’t really going to be an anagram after all. (Doh!)
-E-T -A-E for 25 ac put the wind up me as well, holding me up for minutes at the end. No complaints though.
For extra credit, Mike Burden is whose sergeant?
Also I parsed 25a as definition ‘original suit’ as a test case is the first of its kind. The remainder fits accurately as wordplay.
By the way, you can easily and freely register on this site with create an account under the login button, it’s perfectly safe and lets the rest of us know who you are, or how you’d like to be known. This is a really good place to learn and enjoy the complexities of the cryptic crossword, and you’re very welcome.
Never mind. Thanks to all for your comments.
One thing I can never do is post a solving time, so I’m sorry if I’m persona non grata here on that account. The only reason is that I have a life and am in the habit of putting the crossword down a few times or many times in the course of solving it. I guess this one took me a total of 30 minutes. Having said that, I failed on TEST CASE, which didn’t yield quickly and I didn’t really want to spend time going through all the possibilities (lacking access to any crossword aids at that time).
I thought 5 clues were excellent: 13A (FOG SIGNAL), 14A (VARICOSE VEIN), 2D (DEBRIS), 4D (USER-FRIENDLY) and 11D (AGE OF CONSENT). Like Ulaca, I tried SELF- first instead of USER- at 4D.
21A (CASTELLAN) is the sort of clue whose answer has to be guessed first and then retrofitted to the word play. (‘girl’ has about 400 plausible possibilities in a crossword clue.) Having said that, this was not a difficult clue given a couple of crossers.
‘blue berets’ doesn’t quite make it as an indication for UN in 9A, nor ‘fruit supplier’ for GUAVA in 23A, nor ‘original suit’ for TEST CASE in 25A.
I know the use of ‘in’ as an innocent filler (or ‘padding’) in clues is well established, as exemplified in 3D in this crossword, but I thought the use of ‘at’ in 1D (and possibly ‘being’ in 7D) to perform the same role, just to give a smoother surface, was a bit iffy.
On the whole, this was an enjoyable puzzle with some clever indications and wordplay. Thanks to both setter and blogger.
Alan Browne
Many more than 400 girls – not my favourite clue element, or answer.
Blue Berets close enough for a crossword, exactitude not required.
TEST CASE ditto.
GUAVA – the tree – is a fruit supplier, absolutely spot-on clue.
Agree with you that “at” and “being” are a step too far in extraneous padding.
Perhaps you did this the day after it was published in the Australian? Your comments are about 5 weeks (not 4 days) after everyone else who did it in UK.
Cheers,
Rob