This was fairly easy for a Saturday. It was distinguished by some very clever anagram indicators that took me time to see, and some clever usages I had to look at twice. LOI was 9ac, where I struggled to see the necessary lifting and separating. Thanks to the setter for a very enjoyable puzzle.
Notes for newcomers: The Times offers prizes for Saturday Cryptic Crosswords. This blog is posted a week later, after the competition closes. So, please don’t comment here on the current Saturday Cryptic.
Clues are blue, with definitions underlined. Deletions are in [square brackets].
| Across | |
| 1 | When horse is gone, cut round top field (6) |
| MEADOW – MOW around [H]EAD. | |
| 5 | Steal coin in collecting dish (8) |
| PECULATE – ECU in PLATE. The ECU (in capitals) was a precursor to the Euro; écus were various French coins; take your pick! | |
| 9 | Reduced form of fruit waste (8) |
| FIGURINE – FIG | URINE. | |
| 10 | Never returning old novel — a year afterwards (3-3) |
| ONE-WAY – O | NEW | A | Y. | |
| 11 | Run with a porky footballer (6) |
| GOALIE – GO | A | LIE. | |
| 12 | Whatever is peculiar to New York? (8) |
| ANYTHING – it’s peculiarly … A *N.Y.* THING! | |
| 14 | What we must have to get wage — marginal brightness? (6,6) |
|
SILVER LINING – the marginal brightness is of course the SILVER LINING on the cloud. I’m not sure why I need a silver lining to get my wages – what’s that about? On edit: thanks to |
|
| 17 | Chain Japanese dog in filthy place — it’s odd that (7,2,3) |
| STRANGE TO SAY – RANGE | TOSA (Japanese fighting dog), in STY. | |
| 20 | Bar limiting sailors in cap on drink (5,3) |
| SCREW TOP – STOP ‘limiting’ CREW. | |
| 22 | Falling down like an idiot, circling right round (6) |
| DROOPY – DOPY ‘circling’ R | O. | |
| 23 | Blackcurrant liqueur cut with a substance like cinnamon (6) |
| CASSIA – CASSI[S] | A. I didn’t know the plant but did know of the drink and trusted the wordplay. | |
| 25 | Nurse brought in a shirt for one who’s present (8) |
| ATTENDEE – TEND ‘brought in’ to A | TEE. | |
| 26 | Make light of gloomy drama (8) |
| DOWNPLAY – DOWN | PLAY. Nice clue. | |
| 27 | Hanker after going round to listen (6) |
| HARKEN – anagram (‘after going round’) of (HANKER*). This was one of the anagram indicators I looked twice at to be sure. | |
| Down | |
| 2 | Inventor has raised fish with upped numbers (6) |
| EDISON – IDE | NOS, each separately reversed. | |
| 3 | Travels twice as quickly to use return repeatedly? (6-5) |
| DOUBLE-SPACE – DOUBLES | PACE. Use the return key repeatedly to produce a document, perhaps a draft, with every second line blank to let you write in comments. | |
| 4 | After scrap, English point out something loser might raise (5,4) |
| WHITE FLAG – WHIT | E | FLAG. | |
| 5 | Herald quietly agrees to travel around (7) |
| PRESAGE – P (quietly), then an anagram (‘to travel around’) of (AGREES*). Another tricky anagram indicator. | |
| 6 | China rabbit’s about right (5) |
| CRONY – CONY ‘about’ R. My first thought was GRASS, but that came from GAS, which was the wrong sort of ‘rabbit’. | |
| 7 | Rest, as when king’s away (3) |
| LIE – LI[K]E. | |
| 8 | Making every effort, son missed out in education (8) |
| TRAINING – [S]TRAINING every sinew! | |
| 13 | One in hotel, say, finally free no more? (11) |
|
HONEYMOONER – a nice cryptic definition. On edit: thanks again to |
|
| 15 | Like a desperate attempt to survive drop (4-5) |
| LAST-DITCH – LAST (survive), DROP (ditch). | |
| 16 | Separated at least three felines going head to head over nothing (8) |
| STACCATO – two or more cats backwards giving STAC, then another CAT, and finally O (nothing). | |
| 18 | Attempt outside work, initially in arty garden design (7) |
| TOPIARY – TRY ‘outside’ OP I[n] A[rty]. | |
| 19 | Species present in region of interest (6) |
| SPHERE – SP (abbreviation for ‘species’), HERE. | |
| 21 | Follow time line for trains (5) |
| TRAIL – T[ime], RAIL. | |
| 24 | Function without energy and go badly wrong (3) |
| SIN – SIN[e] is the trig function. | |
Thanks for the blog – I enjoyed this puzzle, and thought FRUIT WASTE was cleverly misleading too
Edited at 2020-05-29 11:55 pm (UTC)
A slow start was finally ignited when I wrote in “to say” at 17A having been bitten by the dog, and then worked out the rest.
A tricky offering, and I was relieved to creep inside my 20 minute target.
FOI STRANGE TO SAY
LOI FIGURINE
COD HONEYMOONER
TIME 17:29
But I must have speeded up a bit after that as I had just two left at 1240 pm. LOI was HARKEN where I was looking for something a bit more complicated; perhaps I’d have got it more quickly if the clue had been in a QC.
Knew Cassis from the drink so CASSIA not a difficult guess. Not all parsed -especially Silver Lining- but all correct this week. David
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