Times Jumbo 945 (1 Oct 2011)

Time: None recorded as I left it at one point and forgot to pause, so when I came back the time was up to about 6 hours. I think it was probably somewhere in the order of 1hr 45min.

A decent mix of good and bad, much as you would expect from a Jumbo. I thought the &lit at 1a was rather neat, also 7d & 38a were both well put together. At the other end of the scale, I thought 9 & 13a were both quite weak, although 13 seems so weak that I feel I must be missing something clever.

cd = cryptic def., dd = double def., rev = reversal, homophones are written in quotes, anagrams as (–)*, and removals like this

Across
1 P + ADDING – a particularly neat &lit.
5 COTE-DOR (or rather Côte d’Or) = (winE + DOCTOR)*
9 AIRSICK – cd, but rather a weak one. I think the solver was supposed to picture real butterflies, but ‘having butterflies’ is too common an expression for that I would have imagined. Certainly, my first thought was of feeling queasy.
13 LOOSE CANNON – I’m sure there must be some clever wordplay in here somewhere, but I can’t see it. It’s not just a weak cd, is it?
14 IN CHARACTER = INCH + A + RACER about Track
15 GHANA = HAN (Chinese) in GA (Georgia)
16 H(AIR + C)UT – A pageboy haircut hangs straight to below the ear, then turns under. As sported by Johnny Depp in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
17 NOnCOM + MEN + There
18 AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION – cd
23 UNSTRUNG – dd
25 PAN + IN + I – although I wasn’t sure why ‘burning’ was IN
27 TRINKET = (KNITTER)*
30 bOUGHT
32 BLUE TIT = (LET IT Be)* about U
33 TSETSE FLY = SETS + EFL in TurkeY
35 WHOLE MEAL
36 CUR + I(OU)S
37 SWIFT – dd – Jonathan, the author of Gulliver’s Travels, was a satirist
38 RETINAS = RETSINA with the S moved to the end – ‘They’ll pick up light’ is the well-disguised definition
40 CALLER = CELLAR with the A&E swapped
41 GRANDEUR = GRAN + RUED rev
44 THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME = (LOOSE A MERE KITCHEN HELP)*
48 PR + OUST + IAN
50 MU + G + GINS – that’s ‘character’ as in ‘letter of the alphabet’
53 sOFTEN
54 EDIFICATION = ED + faIry + FIC(A)TION
55 ANTIOXIDANT = (fIND TAXATION)*
56 SUCh + ROSE
57 GRAVELY – hidden
58 TIMOTHY = OMIT rev + THY
Down
1 P + H(LEG)M – I wasn’t familiar with this meaning of phlegm. Although about 2 days after I solved this, the same meaning cropped up in the daily puzzle, clued in quite a similar way
2 D(I + O)RAMA
3 ICELANDER – dd – a spacecraft designed to land on ice would be an ice lander, presumably.
4 GRAPe + H
5 CON + VI(N)CE
6 TUNIC = IN in CUT all rev
7 DRI(FT)ER – a good example of the ‘lift & separate’ technique with ‘desert nomad’
8 RECONCILIATION = (COIN I ALTER ICON)*
9 ANARCHIST = I + ST after AN ARCH
10 REA(Lost)M
11 IN THE NICK + OF + TIME
12 KERATIN – hidden
19 ENNOBLE = EL + BONNEt all rev
20 PRACTICAL – dd
21 A LI(AS)E + S
22 TUG OF WAR – cd
24 SIGN OF THE ZODIAC = (CITIZEN’S GOOF HAD)*
26 INTERFERE = ERE + FRET + NI all rev
28 TOY STORY = (SOOTY TRY)* – The original Pixar movie and still the best
29 PUB + LICkS + PENDING
31 TWEE + oNlInE
34 ELSTREE = ELM TREE with M (millions) replaced by S (small) – British film studio that produced many classic movies including The Dam Busters, Ice-Cold in Alex & 633 Squadron
39 SYNDICATE = CA in (DESTINY)*
42 NEOLOGISM = O + LOG + IS in MEN rev
43 MINI’S + TRY
44 TOPLESS = Oliver + PL in TESS
45 AMMONIA = AN rev about I after AMMO
46 EXTRA + CT
47 KNOTTY = KITTY with NO for I
49 SLIGO = “SLY” + GO
51 GO APE = EG rev about OAP
52 S + POUT

2 comments on “Times Jumbo 945 (1 Oct 2011)”

  1. 32:10 here, with PANINI taking me a ludicrous amount of time at the end – and I’ve no excuse as I’m thoroughly familiar with IN = “burning” (Collins (1986) gives “do you keep the fire in all night?” as an example).

    I wasn’t all that keen on 9ac (AIRSICK) either, but 13ac is OK if you think of billiards.

  2. A speedy (for me) 76′; it would have been a lot longer if I hadn’t decided that I had somewhere heard of Elstree. PANINI took a long time, too; especially as the only Panini I knew is the great Sanskrit grammarian of the 4th BCE; it took linguistics until the 20th century to catch up with him.

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