Times Quick Cryptic 3139 by Dangle

Quite a straightforward one today, I thought, confirming Dangle’s position on  Starstruck’s stats table as the second easiest setter. I was slow getting either of the 1s or this could have been very fast; even as it was I clocked 05:34 so I’m expecting warp speed from The Lord Verlaine and other gods. [On edit: TLV clocked in at 01:56 … left in the dust by mohn at 01:34. Look on their Works, ye Mighty, and despair!]

Accessibility did not come at the expense of quality cluing and I thought this was a terrific puzzle. Many thanks Dangle; hope you all enjoyed it too.

Definitions underlined in bold.

Across
1 Congratulatory gesture seconds before friend returned (8)
BACKSLAP – BACKS [seconds, as in “backs the motion”] + LAP [“pal” backwards, i.e. “friend returned”].
5 Unaccompanied male’s second name (4)
STAG – S [second] + TAG [name].
9 Discard attempt in game (5)
BINGO – BIN [discard] + GO [attempt, as in “have a go”].
10 Red mark on skin from really minor injury? (7)
SCARLET – definition with a cryptic hint. A scar could come from an injury, but if it was a really small scar it would (whimsically) be a scar-let and thus in turn the product of a “really minor injury”.
11 Shelter from swimmer going the wrong way (3)
LEE – “eel” backwards [swimmer going the wrong way].
12 Avoid losing money from holiday flat (5,4)
BREAK EVEN – BREAK [holiday] + EVEN [flat]. I could do with a break, roll on the Christmas vacation.
13 Most pleasant flying insect (6)
NICEST – anagram [flying] of “insect”. Well-disguised.
15 Makes great effort to lose Romeo in Cornish town (2,4)
ST IVES – ST{r}IVES.
17 Muscular gent inappropriately entertains country (9)
ARGENTINA – hidden.
19 Very eager to finish early in the past (3)
AGO – AGO{g} (i.e. “very eager” [agog] without its final letter [finishing early]).
20 Good girls in spectacles (7)
GLASSES – G [good] + LASSES [girls]. Such a neat surface.
21 Sick following doctor’s training exercise (5)
DRILL – ILL [sick] coming after [following] DR [doctor].
22 Grass on editor (4)
REED – RE [on] + ED [editor].
23 Bruce and Dicky’s vegetarian paste (4,4)
BEAN CURD – anagram [dicky] of “Bruce and”.
Down
1 Infant left on “wonderful” location (7)
BABYLON – BABY [infant] + L [left] + ON [on]. One of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World was the Hanging Gardens of Babylon and so Babylon was  a “wonderful” location, geddit? I didn’t geddit until the end of my solve. Very good clue.
2 Ocean tossed around small vessel (5)
CANOE – anagram [tossed around] of “ocean”.
3 Appear to be fully employed in the field of entertainment (4,8)
SHOW BUSINESS – jokey cryptic; to “look busy” is to appear to be fully employed, and “show busi-ness” sort of equates to “look busy”.
4 Passage in church I will broadcast (5)
AISLE – homophone [broadcast] of “I’ll”.
6 Attendant upset four in city in Israel (3,4)
TEL AVIV – VALET [attendant] going backwards [upset] + IV [four in Roman numerals].
7 Grow old, say, after turning 100 (3,2)
GET ON – EG [say] going backwards [after turning] = GE + TON [hundred].
8 Denmark great for development as place to sell fruit and veg (6,6)
MARKET GARDEN – anagram [for development] of “Denmark great”.
14 Connected up Echo, Tango, Charlie (7)
COGNATE – reading backwards [up] this goes E [echo] + TANGO [Tango] + C [Charlie]. This one really stumped me because I blundered straight into the trap of treating “Tango” as simply indicating a T. That gave ETC, so I mucked around wondering whether “etcetera” could also be shortened to 7 letters or whether I was looking for a synonym of it, and also whether “etc” or  some equivalent could mean “cognate” anyway. Eventually light dawned. COD from me, clever clue. COGNATE means “akin” or “related”; it comes from the Latin co-natus, literally “same born”.

[On edit: given the number of people who think this is a reverse hidden, I need to explain myself more clearly. It’s not a reverse hidden: that would give you “cognato”. It operates as C [Charlie] + OGNAT [reverse tango] + E [echo]. That’s why it’s so clever, because all three words are from the Nato alphabet but only two of them are being used in that way.]

16 Grimaced, as small farmyard animal was ahead (7)
SCOWLED – S [small] + COW [farmyard animal] + LED [was ahead].
17 Fury in most of French city (5)
ANGER – ANGER{s}. The Crosswordland map of France largely consists of Nice, Tours and Angers.
18 One’s to make legal claim for children (5)
 ISSUE – I’S [one’s] + SUE [make legal claim]. A pedantic lawyer writes: “As a matter of law, the word ‘issue’ ordinarily means more than simply ‘children’, and encompasses all descendants.” In other words, if you leave a gift in your will to your “issue” you probably bring in all the grandchildren too. However, the dictionaries are less pedantic, so Dangle’s in the clear.
19 Gold pens stop working in farewell (5)
ADIEU – AU [gold] contains [pens, as in penning up sheep] DIE [stop working].

 

87 comments on “Times Quick Cryptic 3139 by Dangle”

  1. 9.23 SCARLET was delayed by a fat-fingered AILSE. I biffed ARGENTINA and COGNATE to finish and parsed them afterwards. The latter was nicely misleading. Thanks Templar and Dangle.

  2. Thought it must be easy 6:30 ( do it on paper) ish. I could not even write or type out anwers out in 96 seconds. I just tried, after solving, on the photocopy i save for mu wife. Took two mins plus!

  3. 9:08 here. FOI EEL, LOI COGNATE, which doesn’t mean what I thought it meant. So there’s my TIL moment for the day (“Today I Learned…”)

    Thanks to Dangle and Templar.

  4. 8:56. Thought I was going well until I saw those times by the greats! Great puzzle, nice surfaces and a little bit of crunch for us mere mortals…

  5. Having got NICEST and GLASSES I thought I’d learned a new word CHOTANG for connected, so I bunged it in. Bad mistake! Only when ARGENTINA revealed itself as a hidden did I see the light and start over! So 19 minutes but good fun and some excellent clues – thanks Dangle and Templar.

  6. We were quite happy with our 11:08 and remain so even having now seen some of the very fast times posted. Seeing the proper parsing of COGNATE took a little while – as indeed did recognising it as a known but barely understood word. MER at LOI SCARLET but it was fair enough. COD to BEAN CURD which we didn’t know was not a paste! Thanks to all.

  7. My thanks to Dangle and Templar.
    Nice puzzle, not a big challenge though.
    14d Cognate only known from dictionaries, Wiktionary in particular uses it a lot. Took me a while to suss out that the TANGO was whole.
    1d Babylon, failed to get the “wonderful” bit. Oh dear.

  8. A flying visit as I only did this when we got in from a day out, and now have to go and make some supper! I’ll read everyone’s comments later.
    In the meantime, I thought this was a very nice crossword – yes, quite easy (on the whole) but with some lovely surfaces. ST IVES made me smile. I was just about to say that I didn’t quite get SCARLET, but then – BINGO, as I typed, the penny dropped! A bijou scar-lette (such a 70s phrase!). But COGNATE and ISSUE both went in semi-parsed, even though I got the general drift.
    7:48 FOI Canoe (started on the downs for a change) LOI Cognate COD Break even
    Thanks Dangle and Templar

  9. Late to it today. Online course on internet marketing….all done bar backslap and scarlet. Don’t ask.

    Thanks T and D

  10. 15 minutes

    If that was easy then I really am wasting my time here! Still miles behind the competition. Reading all those comments about how simple it was makes me want to give up.

    Only 10 on 15 x 15. I am nowhere with these puzzles compared to those who started when I did. I would give anything to know the secret to this (or maybe I just lack the appropriate level of mental acuity).

  11. I really enjoyed this offering today,elegantly crafted,unlike the garbage we’ve been getting lately on Daily Globe.Only one I couldn’t parse was COGNATE.

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