Times 27758
Solving time: 55 minutes. I made rather heavy weather of this one as there were a few words or meanings unknown to me, but there’s a lot of easy stuff too
As usual definitions are underlined in bold italics, {deletions and substitutions are in curly brackets} and [anagrinds, containment, reversal and other indicators in square ones]. I usually omit all reference to positional indicators unless there is a specific point that requires clarification.
| Across | |
| 1 | England, gutted, regularly mourned old king (6) |
| EDMUND : E{nglan}D [gutted], M{o}U{r}N{e}D [regularly]. There were three Edmunds, King of England and one of Scotland. | |
| 4 | A walk in the park — then get on a tree (8) |
| CINCHONA : CINCH (walk in the park), ON, A. Never ‘eard of it. A search reveals it has appeared once before in the TfTT era but in a Jumbo, and on that occasion it was defined as the medicinal drug that’s obtained from it. | |
| 10 | Giving up sitting in the auditorium (7) |
| CESSION : Sounds like [in the auditorium] “session” (sitting). Not a word that I’m familiar with. This was one of two clues that slowed me down considerably. | |
| 11 | Passionate old woman about to be involved in affair (7) |
| FLAMING : MA (old woman) reversed [about] contained by [involved in] FLING (affair) | |
| 12 | Special catering arrangement for assembly (4) |
| DIET : Two meanings. The 1524 Diet of Worms was the latter rather than the former. | |
| 13 | Mister, a man surprisingly normal (10) |
| MAINSTREAM : Anagram [surprisingly] of MISTER A MAN | |
| 15 | Man entering skilfully and in pugnacious manner (9) |
| DEFIANTLY : IAN (man) contained by [entering] DEFTLY (skilfully) | |
| 16 | Disciple‘s transgression, second to be admitted (5) |
| SIMON : SIN (transgression) with MO (second) contained [admitted] | |
| 18 | Plant‘s biological rhythm (5) |
| PULSE : Two meanings | |
| 19 | Talks conveying a lot of sound lines (9) |
| ORDINATES : ORATES (talks) containing [conveying] DIN (a lot of sound) | |
| 21 | Measure following clean-up operation in American state (10) |
| WASHINGTON : WASHING (clean-up operation), TON (measure) | |
| 23 | Female pupil ultimately out of favour (4) |
| BESS : B{l}ESS (favour) [{pupi}L ultimately out]. My LOI after a tedious alphabet trawl. | |
| 26 | Like spring baby with a nature that’s wild (7) |
| TAUREAN : Anagram [wild] of A NATURE. To qualify as this one needs to have been born between 19 April and 20 May. | |
| 27 | Sarah to become fatigued and cross (7) |
| SALTIRE : SAL (Sarah), TIRE (become fatigued). An X-shaped cross as on the Scottish flag. | |
| 28 | This man’s with it — worker maybe destined to lose? (8) |
| HESITANT : HE‘ S (this man’s), IT, ANT (worker). According to the old saw “He who hesitates is lost”. | |
| 29 | Absence of d-drink? Or a small amount (6) |
| NOGGIN : NO G-GIN (absence of d-drink) | |
| Down | |
| 1 | Line in US pursued by some police hero (2,3) |
| EL CID : EL (line in US – elevated railway/railroad), CID (some police – Criminal Investigation Department, as opposed to the boys in blue) | |
| 2 | New smart fuel provided by expert (9) |
| MASTERFUL : Anagram [new] of SMART FUEL | |
| 3 | Fix article with nothing to protect it (4) |
| NAIL : A (article) contained by NIL [with (nothing) to protect it] | |
| 5 | Early period at home needing love (7) |
| INFANCY : IN (at home), FANCY (love) | |
| 6 | Rebuking incompletely pure one with chant (10) |
| CHASTISING : CHAST{e} (pure) [incompletely], I (one), SING (chant) | |
| 7 | Think of love and languish (5) |
| OPINE : 0 (love), PINE (languish) | |
| 8 | What must make these worse? Anger must (9) |
| ARGUMENTS : Anagram [make] of ANGER MUST. &lit. | |
| 9 | Actually do something with endless knowledge (2,4) |
| IN FACT : INF{o} (knowledge) [endless], ACT (do something) | |
| 14 | Harmful bloke if upset over money (10) |
| MALEFICENT : MALE (bloke), IF reversed [upset], CENT (money). Another word I’m not particularly familiar with. | |
| 15 | Computer device emulates barbaric test for evil woman? (3,6) |
| DIP SWITCH : Alternatively spaced as DIPS WITCH = ’emulates barbaric test for evil woman’. The only dip switch I was aware of is the motor car headlight control but I understand in computer circles it stands for ‘Dual In-line Package’, some sort of widget that makes it all work. | |
| 17 | Dull group making a difference? (9) |
| MATTERING : MATTE (dull), RING (group) | |
| 19 | System of rules abused in Rangoon (7) |
| ORGANON : Anagram [abused] of RANGOON. SOED has: An instrument of thought or knowledge; a means of reasoning, discovery, etc.; spec. a system of logical rules of demonstration or investigation, esp. the logical treatises of Aristotle. E17. I knew the word but had no idea what it was. | |
| 20 | Sleepy daughter fights — last thing mummy needs (6) |
| DROWSY : D (daughter), ROWS (fights), {mumm}Y [last thing] | |
| 22 | Ship with cargo of sweet vegetables (5) |
| SPUDS : SS (ship) contains [with cargo of] PUD (sweet – pudding course) | |
| 24 | Birds flying, seen from hide around edge of lake (5) |
| SKEIN : SKIN (hide) containing [around] {lak}E [edge]. A flight of wildfowl that once landed reverts to being a flock. | |
| 25 | Singer frequently getting half confused (4) |
| ALTO : A LOT (frequently) [getting half – OT – confused] becomes ALTO (singer) | |
FOI 13ac MAINSTREAM
LOI 23ac BESS – tedious indeed
COD 4ac CINCHONA is where we get most of our natural quinine from.
WOD 29ac NOGGIN – has he not reached America yet? As a lad ‘Noggin The Nog’ was compulsory viewing, as we sat by our great log fires. Written and narrated by Oliver Postgate. Pre- Crown of Thorns animation.
Thank you, jackkt, for parsing EL CID, which went in very quickly, but which I assumed had to be wrong, even though there’s nothing else I could imagine it being. DIET was my last in, with the alphabet trawled and many possibilities written out. I started to get the whiff of the assembly sense, and I had indeed heard of the Diet of Worms from who knows where.
I had to hit and hope with ORGANON and CINCHONA but they seemed reasonable enough from the wordplay and crossing letters.
CESSION didn’t seem strange because of ‘concession’ and ‘cede’ and the like.
CINCHONA was familiar from its medicinal associations and I remembered ORGANON from previous crosswords. Thanks for explaining the EL bit of 1d which I couldn’t get and I was unsure about NOGGIN which I didn’t associate with being ‘a small amount’. The DIPS WITCH was my favourite.
My time being not too bad for me, I quite enjoyed it, trusting the wordplay on CINCHONA and ORGANON. However, maybe it’s just that I easily recalled most of the GK required, including DIP SWITCH, SIMON, Sal=Sarah, SKEIN, MALEFICENT, etc. Without this, I might well have found this quite frustrating.
Obscure words describing birds are worse than obscure birds!
Slightly mollified by Taurean, although here it’s more astrological than astronomical.
Got MALEFICENT from somewhere, evil character in book?
BESS went in with crossed fingers. ALTO unparsed, thanks.
I knew the difference between a SKEIN and a gaggle, which helped.
I loved the film EL CID.
Thanks jack and setter.
I didn’t know MALEFICENT wasn’t just the Angelina Jolie fey with the impressive black horns.
I put up with the two word in the grid which normally have a prefix, CESSION and ORDINATES, and appreciated the clue for HESITANT.
I’m with you, Jack, on DIPSWITCH: if my computer has one it does nothing for the screen brightness. Thanks for elucidation, and thanks too to Horryd for the reminder of NOGGIN the Nog (and his nemesis Nogbad the Bad). Oliver Postgate’s magnificent Welsh lilt is sorely missed.
Having got Organon (OWAA, Obscure Word As Anagram) and Skein and the dodgy Dips Witch…
Having ignored the tree as probably un-gettable and the female as probably a name but which would need alphabet trawls to decide…
Having biffed Alto (unparsed)…
I couldn’t see Noggin, which has left me needing a drink.
Thanks setter and J.
Edited at 2020-09-01 07:43 am (UTC)
Another one who used to love Noggin the Nog!
* For anyone interested (anyone? hello?) the Dual Inline Package bit is more general and refers to the packaging of anything, especially integrated circuits, into a little casing with two rows of connectors at standard distances. So a DIP SWITCH that looks like this will fit into the same socket as a DIP-packaged integrated circuit chip that looks like this. Fascinating, I know…
COD: DROWSY for some reason clues that take ages to describe a single letter appeal to me.
Yesterday’s answer: Meadowlark Lemon famously played for the Harlem Globetrotters, featuring in a cartoon series of my youth.
Today’s question: Washington DC is named after the first US president. What other national capital is named after a US president?
Don’t understand obsession with DIET of Worms. The word is still in current usage in the Bundestag
Edited at 2020-09-01 08:02 am (UTC)
Kudos to ORDINATES for ‘a lot of’ not meaning ‘remove the last letter of’. Always nice to be tripped up by only looking for the obvious.
Nothing wrong with 15dn either.. if you test for something, as the clue says, you are looking to see if it is there or not. And if you are going to drown them, best to assume they are evil .. though since the drowning bit works well only on women who aren’t witches at all, the test has had to be phased out in the end.
20.07 here, nothing too okkard. Didn’t know the el or the tree but both lay-downs with the crossers. Neither did I parse alto but ditto. Good to bounce back from a poor time yesterday.
Edited at 2020-09-01 11:28 am (UTC)
FOI EDMUND
LOI ALTO
COD DROWSY
TIME 8:36
Edited at 2020-09-01 12:47 pm (UTC)
LOI in fact which I biffed to be honest but it seemed a reasonable choice. Glad to see organon was right even if it smacks of one of those dreadful jargon words. Maleficient struck home only due to the daft film of the same title but I don’t care.
COD cession. Partly because it took me a dog’s age to work it out .
I have heard of a DIP SWITCH but didn’t know what one looked like until I clicked on Matt’s helpful links.
My COD has to be DROWSY for its simple construction.
Thanks to the setter for enabling me to finish this in under 25 minutes and to Jackkt for the informative blog.
Otherwise nothing exceptional, except that BESS was a bit excruciating (there must be tons of 4-letter females, although the E and S did narrow it down somewhat).