Solving Time: 16 minutes, so a little on the easier side of average for me. Though having said that, there are one or two I couldn’t parse so let us see if they become clear or help is needed. I see the Editor has lost no time in disabusing Jim of his belief that this blog has had any effect on the crosswords – this one has both a Dickens reference, a hoary word for money and that even hoarier old actor Beerbohm Tree.. still and all, I really enjoyed it, and thought it had some tricky, excellent clues
cd = cryptic definition, dd = double definition, rev = reversed, anagrams are *(–), homophones indicated in “”
ODO means the Oxford Dictionaries Online
|
Across |
|
|---|---|
| 1 | pesky – this took me a while to parse. It is PARTY, with the ART (= craft) replaced by the (river) ESK. |
| 4 | executant – still around = EXTANT containing EC (city, ie of London which has ECx postcodes) + U |
| 9 | eucalypti – EU + *(TYPICAL) |
| 10 | drove – this is DOVER, with the R(apid) advance to make a drove, mobs come in droves.. |
| 11 | in ones element – a dd, one jocular. |
| 14 | tutu – sounds like “Too too” (The fashion show was just too too awful, daahling..) |
| 15 |
dissembler – LE( |
| 18 | |
| 19 | bang – BANG ON without the on.. from Collins: “(slang) an injection of heroin or other narcotic.” I rather object to being expected to know drug cant; I prefer Sam Weller and Beerbohm Tree |
| 21 | talk of the town – I wrote this in happily enough, quite early on but I had no clue about Hamlet. I supposed it was a reference to the play, but now I think it just means hamlet ie village, ie not a town. Incidentally this is a good example of the correct and fair misleading use of a capital H, since as the first word it should have one anyway. Had it appeared later in the clue with an unwarranted capital I would have found it annoying. |
| 24 | Hanoi – A NO in HI, the usual abbreviation for Hawaii. |
| 25 | troweller – TO WELLER containing R(un). Sam Weller is in Pickwick Papers, and (it transpires) Tony is his father.. I don’t believe the word “troweller” has ever been uttered. google results are exclusively dictionary entries and similar. I concede it may occasionally have been uttered by dictionary editors |
| 27 | overgrown – sounds like “overgroan.” Groan. |
| 28 | ridge – G (a musical key) in RIDE |
|
Down |
|
| 1 | prehistory – *(TROY + PERISH) My first in and a useful start |
| 2 | sac – hidden in it’S A Convenient |
| 3 | yeller – dd |
| 4 | expletive – L(eft) in EX PET I’VE. A curious word, seldom mentioned unless it has been deleted.. |
| 5 | elite – this is CARMELITE (friar) without the CAR and the M |
| 6 | undreamt – *(T(eam) + MADE RUN. Not absolutely sure what the “new” is doing, since the somehow is presumably the anagrind. The clue seems to work well without it.. |
| 7 | amontillado – A MON(day) TILL A DO. At last, a subject on which I am expert, though I’m more of a Manzanilla man these days |
| 8 |
trek – RE (Soldiers, royal engineers specifically) in T( |
| 12 | outdistance – OUT (not in) + DISTANCE (aloofness) |
| 13 | dragon-tree – DRAG ON TREE, the aforementioned Beerbohm Tree (1852 – 1917) |
| 16 |
shorthorn – I couldn’t parse this at the time.. it is H( |
| 17 | low-lying – pLaY in LOWING, what Hereford cattle do. Herefords are one of the world’s most successful and widespread cattle breeds |
| 20 | veneer – VEN (what archdeacons are referrred to as) + EER, poetical “ever.” I think of veneer as a solid covering rather than a polish but it is used in the figurative sense in that way, I suppose |
| 22 | outdo – a tricky little clue, one of my last in. OUT (available) + DO (tonic, in the musical sense, ie DO RE ME etc etc). To best (and to worst) both mean to outdo in this odd language we use |
| 23 |
shoo – SHOO( |
| 26 | led – ha ha, a fine reference to Led Zeppelin that I very much enjoyed. Follow the link, and marvel at the viewing count for that song.. |
Edited at 2014-08-06 07:19 am (UTC)
I think you mean that the other say round!
I’m now blaming the ‘new’ at 6d for making me parse it as TEAM* + RUN* with a leftover ‘d’!
In the AFL we call that a percentage-booster.
But actually I had sowed the seeds of my downfall when writing the answer at 18ac as I momentarily had doubts about the spelling of the animal in question, and thinking it ended in -OUS but with insufficient lights to fill, I unaccountably plumped for U instead of O as the penultimate letter. I surely knew this was incorrect so it must have simply been a slip of the pen, or at least I prefer to think that rather than admit that senility is gaining ground faster than I had realised.
SHORTHORN was known to me so it went in fairly promptly once I had amended the incorrect checker. I knew BANG (on) but not the drug reference and I agree with Jerry’s point on that. DRAGON TREE was unknown though I spotted the actor reference having thought we’d seen the last of that particular old chestnut some time ago.
Whilst there’s no doubt of course that a trowel is used in gardening, as far as I can tell the derivatives “trowelling” and “troweller” (an occupation – also spelt ‘trowler’ – that appeared on many an ancient census form apparently) are used with reference to mortar and plasterwork rather than gardening.
Edited at 2014-08-06 06:22 am (UTC)
50 minutes with the last 10 (yes, 10) inexplicably on 4a & 4d. When the light dawned there was a lot of 4 downs.
Like others I guessed at 19a – is it me or are there too many drug references in these crosswords nowadays for comfort? Not that I’m casting any aspersions on the setters, of course.
COD 21a – a delightful misdirection.
“Tony” threw me completely in 25: if it had been just Sam I flatter myself I would have got the Weller, and the “gardener” definition is surely a bit iffy.
Likewise the dreaded “plant” at 13. Being not much of a troweller myself, a plant is anything up to and (if I’m generous) maybe including a shrub. Shrubs merge into bushes, and at some point having to do with mature height and timber production, become trees. A tree is not a plant, or at least shouldn’t be described as such.
I doubt any druggy, even in the most befuddled state has ever described an injection as a BANG at least in the last 50 years. Put in only from bang on, and even then (confession alert) checked before submission.
I doubt anyone’s ever used EXECUTANT outside of a dictionary. Even a lawyer would be ashamed.
OVERGROWN is a horrible pun. LED Zep more of a delight than anything else in this one.
SHOO my last one in, trying to get rid of the G from the end of sporting. Told you I made up my own blind alleys.
I also thought a TROWELLER was a brick layer and was a tad confused by “new” in 6D. Groaned at finding the wretched Tree included. If I had set that clue I would never publically admit it!
15 minutes to solve a rather easy pedestrian puzzle
Thanks very much for explaining these Jerry.
Edited at 2014-08-06 09:22 am (UTC)
For some reason I enjoyed the clue for OVERGROWN a lot more than most of you seem to have done.
Held up a bit in SW by trying to make 23dn RODE(O), which seemed to give EVERGREEN at 26ac, which didn’t really make sense.
I’ve never heard of Sam or Tony Weller – only Paul. If we’d had him as well as Led Zeppelin I’d have been convinced that we were moving towards some real music instead of the usual classical nonsense!
(I had to Google him by the way :))
EXPLETIVE was my favourite, simply because it reminded me of an extended-family holiday when my dear old mum was sitting in the corner enjoying a quick crossword.
“9-letter word for ‘swear word’?” she mused aloud. Her grandchildren took great delight in shouting out their suggestions, each trying to outdo the other with the sophistication of their offerings.
Eventually my brother offered “expletive?”. Mum raised her eyebrows, pushed out her bottom lip and wrote it in, muttering “I wouldn’t call that a swear word”.
God love her.
At 11 I mis-enumerated as 2,3,8 and wrote in IN THE pending enlightenment for the last word* and at 4a decided that I needed to put something inside an anagram of still so wrote in the final 1ST. Sam Weller only just known (put me down for Paul and also Keith).
Last ones in were troweller, veneer and outdo.
*That made 12 look interesting: T-T-I-T-N-E
I can’t remember what Ximenes had to say about capital letters (why on earth didn’t he provide an index to his book?), but as far as the Times crossword is concerned, I expect Edmund Akenhead’s oft-stated rule still applies: the small village can be spelled with either “h” or “H”, but the prince of Denmark is always spelled with “H”.
To be honest, that seems as clear as day to me; but perhaps it isn’t!
I thought I better see what Ximenes had to say. Here’s the relevant chunk from the chapter on “Cluemanship” in X on the Art of the Crossword (p. 45 in my paperback 1st edition):
(Which leaves you somewhere to the right of the Genghis Khan ;-).
I think what he says actually supports my point of view, since he is clearly embarrassed about using the idea – “at a pinch” seems to mean “I know it’s wrong but I’ll do it anyway” – and agrees with me that it is much better to hide the capital somewhere it should properly be used
I rest my case, m’lud, and wish to deprecate m’learned friend’s misuse of the Genghis Khan, whose attitude towards capital letters is hard to determine at this distance. Though he is recorded as having reduced a few actual capitals to lower case