To save time – and also to enable additional comment on this grey Monday morning – I will be writing this entire entry up using only what is stored up in my little grey cells, with no recourse to Google and his slightly rebellious offspring, Wikipedia.
So, you will be getting the naked, unadulterated Ulaca. A scary thought, indeed. Thank God this was largely weighted towards the Classics, even if there is one suspiciously scientific clue, which I may make a complete cock-up of, parsing wise.
Still, that will cause great delight in some quarters, so I rather think everyone will be happier rather than sadder upon reading this blog. 33:50 on the dodgy and incredibly slow iPad.
ACROSS
1. DISACCHARIDE – I mean, honestly, what a silly word. For goodness sake, call a spade a spade and all that. An anagram* of ‘sic[k] I had cared’.
8. RETRIAL – reversal of I + R in LATER.
9. BAVARIA – reversal of AB followed by V + ARIA.
11. AVENGER – ‘fury, perhaps’; VEN (archdeacon) in AGE + R.
12. SENATOR – SENIOR with I replaced by A T.
13. HOYLE – ELY and OH reversed. No idea if this is Sir Fred the astronomer, and to which games the reference might be being made. Possibly the theoretical kind I don’t understand. Thanks to McText: Edmond Hoyle wrote ‘treatises’ on various card games (some of them invented for crosswords, such as quadrille and piquet), one on chess and one on probability theory. It obviously did him no harm, as he lived to nearly a hundred.
14. DESCENDER – this would be a CD referring to the orthographic arts, methinks.
16. FILAGREED – I + LAG in FREED; I put in filigreed at first until I twigged that a lig is something you only find on a Scrabble board and never in the can.
19. SAGAS – a palindromic Njally thing.
21. INSTANT – charade of IN ST and ANT. What Keriothe has next to the Bisto in his kitchen cupboard.
23. CORNICE – another charade, of COR + NICE.
24. GORDIAN – the sort of clue I pray for, even if this one is far too generous with the first letter being given. ADORING*, with ‘fans’ being the cunning anagrindisator.
25. IMMENSE – the setter must be someone who has suffered the trauma of being clubbed about the head by a mathematical type (note the punctiliousness of ‘relatively short’). I + MM + SEEN*.
26. AMERICANISED – got to love this clue, but would it be even better with a ‘zee’? Thanks to K: there’s an overt reference here (missed by me) to Americans spelling words like colour sans U; and there’s a delicious covert reference to that sort of thing being, well, you know, just not cricket. Shades of Charters and Caldicott.
DOWN
1. DITHERY – A Replaced by THE in DIARY.
2. SHINGLE – H in SINGLE.
3. COLERIDGE – COLE + G in RIDE.
4. HOBBS – the great Sir John Berry of Surrey and England, the scorer of a record 197 first-class centuries: one record that will never be broken. OB (short for ‘obiit’ – ‘he [has] passed on’ in Latin) + B in HS.
5. REVENUE – ‘income’; RE + VENUE.
6. DERATED – RAT in DEED; ‘derided’ is a far superior word, but a ‘rid’ is not a pest.
7. PREACHIFYING – CHIEF PRAYING*; I’d have though the whole point of preachifying is that it is something one does when he or she isn’t in the pulpit. Not even in holy orders, in fact.
10. AIR FRESHENER – REFRAINS HERE*.
15. SEDUCTION – CUTIE NODS*.
16. LUSTRUM – a word that most of us will only have come across in crosswords; LUSTR[e] + UM.
18. GLACIER – one for our Northern brethren; if someone oop North has a vacant look on their face (not indeed an altogether uncommon occurrence), and it is a look that is even more vacant than the average, you could say that their look is ‘glassier’ than ever, even if autocorrect is not on your side.
19. SHRIMPS – last of [ou]R in SH and IMPS.
20. GRINNED – [o]NE in GRIND; I suppose a grimace is like a grin – with some people I can think of, definitely, now I come to think of it, Steptoe for one.
22. TONIC – COT around IN, all reversed.
The rest of it took me 45 minutes and I agree with ulaca that 1ac DISACCHARIIDE is a silly word but then so is 7dn PREACHIFYING and 26ac AMERICANISED in it’s Anglified state, my LOI.
FOI 3dn COLERIDGE
WOD 16ac FILAGREED
COD 17dn LUSTRUM of which I was totally unfamiliar.
Blog-on Dude!
It’s a shame we couldn’t fit STOKES into the famous cricketer clue. I know it was “only” Bangladesh but what a fine, match-winning all-round performance. In particular, top scoring on that pitch was no mean feat And what a magnificent Test team Bangladesh have become.
To avoid sidetracking this thread, I took the liberty of creating a Championship chat thread here: http://times-xwd-times.livejournal.com/1616888.html
One P.S. about Hoyle: there is a lovely outtake during the filming of a Bond movie where Roger Moore is playing a particularly tense game of cards. A telephone accidentally rings on the set whereupon Moore exclaims “that must be Hoyle”.
Thanks Keriothe for explaining 26a (yes, it was bleeding obvious – in retrospect) and I must now commit LUSTRUM to memory.
Edited at 2016-10-24 07:55 am (UTC)
I knew there was a scientist of some sort called HOYLE, and assumed he must be the famous game theory chap. Von Neumann does sound a bit like HOYLE, you’ve got to admit. But as mctext points out we’re not looking for a scientist of any sort, but a fellow called Edmond known as the ‘father of whist’.
You may have declined to mention it because it’s so bleeding obvious, ulaca, but 26 is a reference to the removal of the U from words like ‘colour’. This was far from obvious to me, indeed it took a few minutes of head-scratching after solving to see the light. Probably just the absence of caffeine again. I’ve had my dose now, and it certainly wasn’t INSTANT. Unlike Bisto we do actually keep some of this in the cupboard: some people seem to prefer it to coffee.
I said it yesterday but I’ll say it again: it was very nice to meet a few old and new friends from round here at the George on Saturday.
Edited at 2016-10-24 07:20 am (UTC)
Those of a certain vintage may remember a song by Phil Harris called “The Darktown Poker Club” which contained a line to the effect “This game ain’t gonna be played according to Hoyle, it’s gonna be played according to ME”.
I have sent separate apologies re the time machine failure but it wasn’t programmed to take off for ulaca until next Monday.
Edited at 2016-10-24 07:42 am (UTC)
Edited at 2016-10-24 09:26 am (UTC)
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‘Disaccharide’ and ‘derated’ were the two really tough ones where you had to be really careful. Fortunately, I was able to biff ‘filagreed’ without any difficulty.
It would have nice to have a Z in 26ac, but I don’t see any way that could have been achieved in the grid used
I will moan, as I am wont to do, about the nonsense that is “FILAGREED”. When a dictionary says “also spelled” one can often insert a mental “by ignoramuses”; the dictionary is by no means recommending the alternate spelling. This particular errancy gets a paltry 258 hits on Google, which is so low as to be at the random-typewriter-monkeys level.
Edited at 2016-10-24 11:59 am (UTC)
RR
Edited at 2016-10-24 01:01 pm (UTC)
It is recorded for posterity I believe 🙂
PREACHIFYING on the other hand is a silly word.
26a I got eventually but didn’t get the obvious spelling reference to non-U, until coming here, doh. First class clue now I see it.
LUSTRUM I remembered as one of Robert Harris’s trilogy of novels about Cicero. Well worth a read.
FILAGREED as said above, a new spelling for us but wordplay left no room for doubt.
I’ve got a copy of the paperback modern version of HOYLE so no issues there.
Reading the thread started by Sotira about Saturday, I look forward with some trepidation to blogging the nine in due course. Assuming RR sticks to the usual practice of Wednesday publishing.
Perhaps next year I’ll pop over to London and put faces to those avatars and do sme damage to my liver in the George.
Learned a handy new word in LUSTRUM and knew GORDIAN only from the knot. Couldn’t parse the homophone, it takes two giant leaps for me to get from GLACIER to GLASSIER, so let’s make it COD.
Thought “according to Hoyle” was more widely known, I mean it’s used by Jules in Pulp Fiction, what more do you need?
Nice meaty crossword. Thanks setter and U.
Nor related to anything much but something I wanted to mention is some of the wonderful language used on the commemorative plaques in Postman’s Park which I visited on Sunday morning on the circuitous route to Kings Cross. Apart from all being terribly humbling where else will you see expressions like INTREPID CONDUCT, A DANGEROUS ENTANGLEMENT OF WEEDS, and ON A DESPERATE VENTURE? The tale of Sarah Smith, Pantomime Artiste, might be of interest to someone here.
Edited at 2016-10-24 05:07 pm (UTC)
No problem with FILAGREED as it’s been on my “list of difficult words” for ages and so was revised only last week. (After many years, this list is now well over 1000 words long, and contains some stupidly arcane examples which are never likely to appear in a modern Times crossword!)
I am in no mood for agreeing with anyone, but I do have to agree with Pip Kirby that disaccharide is indeed an admirable word, and far less silly than, say, the endless, pointless Greek-derived names for obscure grammatical constructions that nobody – not even a Greek – ever uses. (Is there a Greek-derived name for the propensity to pointlessly name obscure grammatical constructions? No? Thought not.) Perhaps our esteemed blogger was assuming that “disaccharide” was simply a pompous name for table sugar, but it is not. Table sugar (sucrose if you are feeling molecular) is one of many disaccharides, and the term disaccharide is about as simple a word for “two simple sugars linked together” as it is possible to get.
And while I’m in a bad mood I may as well mention that I think “fan” is a fairly poor anagram indicator. Oh, and I hate AIR FRESHENERs and am not at all keen on COLERIDGE.
There, I feel better for having got that off my chest, and am almost in a frame of mind to tackle today’s cryptic.
Edited at 2016-10-25 09:40 pm (UTC)