Times Crossword 25,750 – Et in Gallifrey ego

Solving Time: 22 minutes; about average difficulty. Some very neat clues though I thought, and no real quibbles. Apologies if the blog is a little sketchy; I’m off on an early ferry to France today and need my beauty sleep.

cd = cryptic definition, dd = double definition, rev = reversed, anagrams are *(–), homophones indicated in “”

ODO means the Oxford Dictionaries Online


Across
1 aspires – when = AS + religious right = PI R + E(MBRACE)S. Took me a while to see why the void..
5 arcadia – CAD in ARIA. Arcadia is where the god Pan lived.. also a city on the planet Gallifrey
9 transport – rolled = RAN + S + P in TORT, a civil wrong
10 Nepal – NE + PAL. It is Cockney rhyming slang: China plate = mate
11 Heath Robinson – HEATH + ROBIN + SO + N. I confess I wrote this in without parsing it properly. The US equivalent would be Rube Goldberg..
13 heraldry – *(LYRE HARD)
15 pistol – IST + O in PL(ACE)
17 no-side – EDISON, rev.
19 declares – E + CLARE in policeman = Det. Sgt = DS
22 meals on wheels – *(ONE MASHES WELL). A worldwide 12dn, originated in London by the WRVS during WWII
25 nitro – yellow = gold = OR + TIN, all rev.
26 paralytic – dd.
27 nursery – accountant = (P)URSER in city = NY. Anyone who believes growth there is “assured,” has never seen my veg. patch..
28 earnest – A(NSWER) in man = ERNEST. Does earnest = firm?

Down
1 ante – ETNA rev. Etna is a decade volcano and very active
2 poacher – work = OP rev., + ACHER, a longer. The clever def. being “One at the game”
3 Rasta – god’s = RA’S TA, the Territorial Army volunteer force
4 smothers – M(ALE) + OTHER in the SS.
5 author – H(ENRY) IN AUTO + R(UNS). Another clever clue
6 convivial – N + VI + VI + A in pass = COL. And another..
7 deposit – IS rev. in DEPOT
8 at long last – a dd I suppose, one jocular
12 phenomenon – PO MEN + performing = ON, containing women = HEN. Hen rather than hens can be justified, as in a hen party perhaps.
14 lodestone – see = LO, + good chap = ST + O(VER) in valley = DENE
16 sea horse – visit bay, sounds like “SEE HORSE.” The enumerations should surely be (8) rather than (3,5) Seahorses are amazing creatures, truly remarkable in many ways, their sex life not the least.
18 shatter – (TEAR)S + HATTER, a “top fashion designer,” ha ha
20 rosette – entrenched = SET, in ROTE
21 snappy – doze off = NAP, in SPY
23 Euler – the French = LE in RUE rev. Clever clue indeed for a clever man, a great and prolific mathematician.
24 Scot – C(LUBS) in drunk = SOT

Author: JerryW

I love The Times crosswords..

58 comments on “Times Crossword 25,750 – Et in Gallifrey ego”

  1. 38 minutes fully parsed. Mostly straightforward. Two that gave me trouble in the past were easy this time round, namely EULER and NO-SIDE.

    SEA HORSE is two words in Collins and the Oxfords. On earnest/firm I thought one might make an earnest or firm commitment to something or other.

    1. Interesting… the Oxford online has only seahorse. So does Wikipedia. The OED online has only sea-horse. Collins online says “seahorse or sea horse” but uses the former spelling for the entry..
      1. As you say, interesting. I just checked all my dictionaries:

        Collins,
        Concise Oxford,
        Shorter Oxford(two volume):
        “sea horse” only

        Oxford Dictionary of English (as used by Susie Dent on Countdown),
        Chambers:
        “seahorse” only

        Dictionary.com has both, with “seahorse” as the entry heading but “sea horse” as the first listing and “seahorse” as an alternative.

        The only place I have seen it with a hyphen is Dr Annandale’s Concise English Dictionary in an edition published pre-WWII.

        Edited at 2014-04-02 06:10 am (UTC)

    2. OED has SEA-HORSE only.

      More interestingly it can mean variously the walrus, the narwhal, a fabulous marine animal, a sea-horse (hippocampus), a flying fish, a hippopotamus, or a white-crested wave.

  2. Never was sure what NO-SIDE meant. Can anyone help?
    But it must have been the first ever cryptic I did that had a cobbler AT LAST.
    Probably in the Liverpool Echo and clued by Trevor Salisbury, a drinking mate of my Old Dad.
    1. This via our ‘friend’:

      ‘John Griffiths, a rugby union historian, states that “when a breakdown in play occurred in the early days of the game it was common for players to ask which side would have possession to restart the game. If the match umpire (later referee) answered ‘no side’, it denoted that time was up.” The expression has been used officially in previous editions of the Laws of the Game, for example during the 1880s.

      No side has been superseded in popular usage by the term full time.’

      1. Thanks so much. I often heard it — my old Dad was rugby correspondent on the Echo (see above) — but I never understood why.
        1. A master at my school used to say it. Since he was born around 1915, it probably reflects what was said in the 20s and 30s when he was playing the game.
        2. I first heard it from the late BBC rugby commentator Bill McClaren who used it quite frequently during his commentaries on the 5 nations as it was then I the 60s and 70s.
  3. 44 minutes, holding myself up by putting ‘phenomenal’. Especially liked POACHER.
  4. 18m. Nice puzzle, I thought, with some well-disguised definitions so not much going in from the definition. I remembered NO-SIDE from a previous puzzle. I’m not sure about HEN for ‘women’ but I didn’t even notice when solving.
    1. I think I’m okay with hen/women as explained in the blog but I’m still puzzled by ’rounds without’.

      Surely ‘without’ is sufficient as insertion indicator and ’rounds’ doesn’t add anything to the surface reading. It would appear to suggest a reversal which as far as I can tell doesn’t apply.

      1. I see what you mean. Actually the clue would make more sense if it said “without men”. I wonder if that is what was intended.
  5. 22′ 22″ possibly suffering from the knock on effect of tackling the club monthly immediately before and being programmed to look for obscurities with J in them.
    CoD to the cobbler, with a mention for the definition for heraldry.
    I held myself up by unaccountably having HEATH ROBONSON, which made that N66 business in 6d completely opaque
    I was so relieved to be able to correct PHENOMENAL I didn’t notice what may be an error in the clue (Jason thinks so, so it must be true) which works better as “without men”
    1. Oops, I replied to Jack before seeing your comment. It seems clear that “without men” would be better. I wonder if this was an editorial, um, edit.
  6. 35m today. I agree with Jerry that there were some neat clues in that they read very well, particularly those for PISTOL, AUTHOR and CONVIVIAL.
  7. 19:35 … lovely puzzle. I didn’t parse PHENOMENON carefully enough to notice any problem – close enough for government work, as they say.

    CONVIVIAL is brilliant, as is PISTOL. And I do like “One at the game” for POACHER.

    Thank you, setter. Bon voyage, Jerry.

  8. Just under 18 mins for the second day running and a pleasant puzzle. I’ve only read the comments here but ‘without men’ for ‘hen’ seems to be the better version of the clue. Had a problem this week (on iPad) when posts run to more than one page. The first page says, say, 63 posts but when I move to page 2 it says only 50. Works OK the next day. Is it just me? Irritating only in that I have to wait a day for Tony Sever’s views.
    1. I’m flattered that you’re prepared to wait, especially since it’s arguably my fault anyway for posting so darned late! (I normally solve after my wife has retired to bed, to minimise the chances of being disturbed.)
  9. Fell asleep while solving so no idea of my total time. Totally messed up the SW. First I put in PHENOMENAL without checking wordplay carefully. Then put in SCATTER, which also means upset. Came here to find out why CATTER is top fashion designer, something to do with catwalks I assumed. Oh well.
  10. 21 mins. I had all but the 18dn/27ac crossers within about 15 mins but then struggled. I finally saw the hatter that let me to SHATTER after discounting “scatter” for its lack of parsability (I’m glad I didn’t think of catwalks like paulmcl did), and eventually remembered that I’d entered “phenomenal” at 12dn without bothering to fully parse it. Once I’d reread the clue and changed my answer to the correct PHENOMENON my LOI, NURSERY, was a write-in.

    I agree that this was a very enjoyable with plenty of top quality cluing and a few cunning and/or amusing definitions thrown in to boot, all of which have been mentioned above.

  11. Exactly half an hour, with a few chuckles on the way: particularly liked the idea of mashing bananas for meals on wheels.

    Spent some time failing to sort out 12 before entering it and am reassured by the comments above that it wasn’t just my problem.

    For what it’s worth, I thought the puzzle had a good mixture of clues with a range of different types including some easy ones to “let the dog see the rabbit” and a few that required careful unpicking.

  12. I wonder why so many dictionaries have chosen to go definitive on the spelling of this creature with differing results, instead of simply listing two or three alternatives as they do with hundreds of other words.
  13. Lovely puzzle today I thought and pleased with 16:35
    Particularly liked convivial (I even pointed this one out to my wife who whilst she ‘can’t see the point’ of this delightful indulgence actually rather warmed to this clue).
  14. Got about two thirds of this one out. However, having read the blog and comments I’m still struggling to understand a couple – really appreciate any further assistance (and apologies if I am being dense):

    1ac: how does “religious” give PI? No idea how we morph from a mathematical thing to a religion!

    9ac: Utterly baffled by this. Get the S and P and TORT, and vaguely see how “rolled” might give RAN (would I be on the right track with rolling an old style film tape to “run” the film?”) but can see no overall indicator / definition pointing to TRANSPORT as the answer.

    1. Pi is a rather old-fashioned contraction of pious which was used as a mild insult for people regarded as overly religious.
    2. Hi Nick
      In crosswordland, pi = pious = religious. Just the way it is. In 9ac, transport = entrance (ie transport of delight; I was entranced by that music etc. Hope this helps!
    3. And with the definition for transport, it rather depends on where you put the stress on entrance. Not the way in but as in “entranced”, with the accent on the second syllable. Collins gives “to fill with wonder and delight; enchant”.
      And then we have transport, not in this case London (though see below) tubes and buses, but ecstasy or rapture.
      Flanders and Swann delightfully used transport in both senses in describing the London Bus as a “transport of delight”, referencing a metrical version of the 23rd Psalm, viz: “Oh what transport of delight from thy pure chalice floweth”. Couldn’t do it today and expect to get anything other than a bewildered response.
      1. Excellent – thanks. I do recall the F & S “monarch of the road / observer of the highway code”: curiously a scratchy old recording of At The Drop of A Hat was the soundtrack to an unlikely tryst with a Russian lady a few years ago – OK, too much information but the surreal quotient makes it irresistible to relate.
  15. Agree with all above that this was a most enjoyable midweek puzzle, so thank you setter. COD without doubt CONVIVIAL
  16. Grateful thanks to both z8b8d8k and tringmardo. Will add PI to my collection of weird and wonderful crosswordland conventions.

    Re. transports of delight, now get it – thanks tringmardo. Shades of Spike Milligan then!

    1. Sorry the blog wasn’t clearer.. to be fair to crosswordland, pi = pious *is* in actual use, though possibly not by the regular contributors here.. but ladies of a certain age in my village use it.
  17. An email from a friend this morning indicated that he expected me to solve this in 11 mins (he usually takes twice as long as me) and I finished in 11:45 with two small interruptions by people coming into my office looking for keys.

    A very enjoyable crossword with some very nice surface readings.

  18. What a lovely puzzle, many clever disguises and other touches, my most enjoyable for a while. MInd you, and I think I’ve said this before, I prefer puzzles which, as someone has said, ‘let the dog see the rabbit’, and this was a splendid example.

    CoD without doubt CONVIVIAL, which pretty much sums up how to throw a solver off the scent, plus POACHER and the cobbler joke.

    More of same please! Great blog too from Jerry.

    Chris.

  19. Excellent enjoyable stuff. Just my sort of puzzle, although I did wonder about 12 down. In the end I assumed that ‘hen’ as an animal could be plural, as in zebras/zebra etc. I currently have 5 hen in the coop. But does this translate to ‘women’? Hmm.

    Edited at 2014-04-02 01:00 pm (UTC)

  20. Shade under two hours for this really excellent puzzle. Great fun, loved convivial, Euler (never heard of him) and poacher. Spent ages on 1ac and 1dn. Thank you setter and blogger.

    Nairobi Wallah

  21. DNK NO-SIDE, or DENE, which made the SW corner the last bit to fall.

    Also couldn’t parse ASPIRES, so thanks for working that one out.

  22. I, too, thought it ought to be “without men”, “rounds” presumably meaning “surrounding”, rather than “on” serving as “performing rounds” as opposed to just “performing”, so that “without” cannot in this context be interpreted as “surrounding”. If you follow….
  23. Finished just now after nibbling away at it all day. 9hrs 12min per iPad.
    FOI Nepal, LOI Poacher (loved that def).
    Also liked the def of ‘hatter’.
    Good to see one of the greatest mathematicians ever (Leonhard Euler) appearing.
  24. So, where’s this Gallifrey place that our blogger et in, and was it any good?

    About 40min for me, helped somewhat by having the right clues printed in the right place!

    COD for me was TRANSPORT, if only for the misdirection (the clue itself was a little clunky, I thought), closely followed by CONVIVIAL. Failed to fully parse LODESTONE, and does it really mean a focus of attention? I suppose it’s magnetic, which amounts to the same thing, in a way.

    Three cheers for EULER. I hope we will soon be given others (such as Ramanujan).

  25. One pretty much like yesterday’s, but without the strange words. About 40 minutes, give or take. Funny, these always seem to take longer when I’m at home rather than on the Balham – West Brompton train. Less sense of limited time, more distractions?

    Liked CONVIVIAL and POACHER, my joint CODs. FOI NEPAL, LOI ROSETTE. Nice anagram of MEALS ON WHEELS – wanted to put in “beans on” something for ages. Wrong fodder/anagrind. Some nice misleading surfaces and less than obvious definitions.

    No problem with PHENOMENON: PO MEN, performing=ON, the whole “rounds” =surrounds “without men”=HEN (a “without men” party = a HEN party).

      1. So it does. Thanks. As you have replied to my comment, I can’t delete the offending line, and I have now joined the ranks of the mystified.

        Edited at 2014-04-02 10:32 pm (UTC)

  26. Here I am, back from France, 14 cases of wine the better off..

    I can’t decide whether 12dn is correct or not and without input from the setter or editor we may never know. Technically it *does* work as it is, as parsed in the blog, with the containment indicator being “rounds without” as in “The gamekeeper waits without, m’lord..” ie without means outside. But using two words seems a tad clunky and I do feel that changing women to men improves the clue somewhat.

    1. It seems clear to me that this is a mistake. “Without men” is a reasonable synonym for HEN. “Women” isn’t. It would be nice to hear from the setter or editor though.
  27. About 25 minutes, ending with HEATH ROBINSON, because I think he’s appeared here before, allowing me to extract him from deep in my memory. I agree with the dapper Londiniensis re the parsing of PHENOMENON, which I had to carefully study due to originally entering phenomenal. Very nice puzzle today. Regards.

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