Times Quick Cryptic No 1272 by Alconiere

Should have been 8’30” but ended up at 9’30” as I spent a full minute trying to figure out the last three letters of 22 Across. A very straightforward puzzle with a lot of answers written in with barely a glance at the definition. Nevertheless, the wordplay is quite nice, and I appreciate the use of plurals not ending in ‘s’ (and vice versa).

Across

1 Shy away on the subject of company I left (6)
RECOIL – RE (“on the subject of”) + CO (“company”) + I + L (“left”)
4 Caught a number of ladies dancing like German shepherds? (6)
CANINE – C (“caught”) + A + NINE
A reference to ‘The Twelve Days of Christmas’. The question mark is part of the definition and signifies ‘for example’.
8 Initially, carpet fitter [looking for] a charlady? (7)
CLEANER – first letter of CARPET + LEANER
Same with the question mark here.
10 What’s used by forger: some German villain (5)
ANVIL – letters in GERMAN VILLAIN
Wouldn’t this need a question mark?
11 What we have to protect quick / fixes (5)
NAILS – double definition
‘Quick’ is the skin under fingernails or toenails.
12 Warriors [from] Asia, drunk with rum (7)
SAMURAI – ASIA anagrammed with RUM
13 A boxing match features command to turn round (5,4)
ABOUT FACE – A + BOUT + FACE
17 Billiard player needs this signal before dance (3,4)
CUE BALL – CUE + BALL
19 Instrument in lorry to set about a check (5)
TACHO – TO around A + CH (“check”)
Wouldn’t this need a question mark? Etc. Short for ‘tachometer’.
20 US agents grabbing Catholic roughly (5)
CIRCA – C.I.A. around RC (“Catholic”)
21 One collects trash — and smut, unusually (7)
DUSTMAN – AND SMUT anagrammed
22 Show cheat device for regulating temperature (6)
AIRCON – AIR + CON
23 Extremes of emotion left expert [in] bind (6)
ENLACE – first and last letters of EMOTION + L (“left”) + ACE

Down

1 French tragedian [in] a nicer translation (6)
RACINE – A NICER anagrammed
Thanks to kevingregg for the catch.
2 Ministerial oversight? (8,5)
CLERICAL ERROR – cheeky &-lit-ish definition
3 Detachment from delegation escorting French playwright (7)
IONESCO – letters in DELEGATION ESCORTING
Didn’t figure this one out until writing the blog!
5 Scare in the manner of resident magistrate (5)
ALARM – A LA + RM (“resident magistrate”)
6 One of four in “Sunday best” turned up before interval (8,5)
INVERTED COMMA – INVERTED + COMMA
Didn’t know ‘comma’ for ‘interval’ but apparently it’s a term in music? Probably what I call a ‘breath mark’.
7 Cake [of] rice Al cut up (6)
ECLAIR – RICE with AL put inside, all reversed
9 Large seat in crimson given a new home? (9)
RESETTLED – SETTLE in RED
Didn’t know the term for the seat.
14 Prejudiced, dismissing head craftsman (7)
ARTISAN – PARTISAN without the first letter
15 A cactus chopped in half, one by a shrub (6)
ACACIA – A + first half of CACTUS + I + A
16 One lent money, behold, a necessity, almost (6)
LOANEE – LO + A + NEED with all but the last letter
18 Payload missing odd parts on second mission (5)
ALAMO – even numbered letters of PAYLOAD + MO (“second”)

EDIT: Comments on some of the clues

Let’s dig in!

Across
4 Caught a number of ladies dancing like German shepherds? (6)

One thing you can usually count on with Quickies is that the wordplay is much more bald. (With the 15×15 puzzles, the setters do whatever they can to fool you into the wrong interpretation of wordplay indicators.) Use this to your advantage!

So, for example, when you see ‘caught’ as the first word, it might be the definition, but most likely it indicates that C is the first letter of the answer. Write down ‘C’. Put it on the page so your mind starts searching for answers.

Another thing you can count on with Times puzzles (Quickies or 15x15s) is that every word has a meaning. Therefore the word ‘a’ undoubtedly means A. So write it down!

Now, I could be wrong. The answer could be ‘caught’, or ‘a’ could really be part of ‘a number’ which could clue TWO for all I know. But most likely, especially in a Quickie, these words indicate the little pieces we’ll use to put a word together.

If CA _ _ _ _ is the answer, then the definition has something to do with German shepherds. Now’s the time to let the mind muse on words relating to dogs that begin with CA. If you think of CANINE, you can be sure it’s right, because NINE is a number and we’ve yet to decode the part of the clue that refers to ‘number’.

Also, ‘number’ can indicate N, which might help you stumble into the answer.

If you didn’t think of CANINE, then work on some of the crossing clues.

Of course, ‘dancing’ could indicate an anagram, but none of the adjacent words have the right number of letters, so just cross out that possibility.

11 What we have to protect quick fixes (5)

I didn’t get what was going on with this one until writing the blog. I had some crossing letters, and was parsing it maybe as “What we have to protect / quick fixes”, and was thinking of NAILS as just something we use to protect ourselves. Only in writing the blog, and forcing myself to try to account for every word, did I realize how to parse the clue.

12 Warriors from Asia, drunk with rum (7)

Of course I can’t help if the word SAMURAI is obscure to you. I grew up in the 80s and 90s in the United States, and samurais were very popular in TV and in video games. Also, I have a weird brain that somehow recognizes RACINE and IONESCO without having read a word either of them wrote. Very very helpful for doing crossword puzzles.

Where I can help is that you should absolutely absolutely absolutely know that the answer here is an anagram of ASIA+RUM. In a 15×15, the wordplay would be more subtle, but with a Quickie, you should feel 100% confident that the answer here is a word meaning ‘warriors’, and that the wordplay is an anagram of these letters. If you didn’t catch that, we gotta go back to basics! (Let me know, and I can try to help.)

20 US agents grabbing Catholic roughly (5)

As before, ‘roughly’ could indicate an anagram, but since ‘Catholic’ doesn’t have the right number of letters, throw that idea straight out.

‘US agents’ is invariably CIA, which is a big hint. Maybe it could be FEDS or something but I’m not sure I’ve ever seen that. So, with a five-letter clue this is a huge hint, as the answer is either:

C _ _ IA or CI _ _ A ,

because ‘grabbing’ also will 100% in a Quickie indicate putting a word inside another. So you should definitely be writing C _ _ _ A into the grid.

This means that the answer is ‘roughly’, and if you don’t know the word CIRCA, you ought to learn it, because using ‘about’, ‘around’, ‘roughly’, etc to indicate C or CA (abbreviations for ‘circa’) is a Cryptic Crossword chestnut.

Alternatively, you might have know that RC is an abbreviation for (Roman) Catholic, although I would imagine this isn’t commonly used, even in the UK.

22 Show cheat device for regulating temperature (6)

Many solvers, myself included, mentioned that this was our last answer in. I’ve never heard of AIRCON and that’s not a term in the US as far as I know.

The word ‘cheat’ is not part of the definition, because ‘show cheat’ is not a thing, and neither is ‘cheat device for regulating temperature’. Therefore the definition is either ‘show’ or ‘device for regulating temperature’, and this latter surely has to be it. If the answer was 10 letters we could just slam in THERMOSTAT.

Okay, so we have a very reasonable guess for the definition. Therefore the wordplay must be “show cheat”, which 100% in a Quickie has to be a charades-style cluing where the answer is a synonym for ‘show’ + a synonym for ‘cheat’.

If you have crossing clues as I did, you might have A _ R at the start, and ‘show’ = AIR is very common in these puzzles. Indeed, the word AIR is very very very common in cryptics, so you should be on guard for it. (It took me years to finally catch on to ‘key’ = ALT, but we have to get these things if we want to improve!)

I had AIR _ O _ and was contemplating AIRBOX (still thinking of ‘thermostat’), and wondering if BOX was a synonym for ’cheat’. Finally I threw that out and just started thinking of synonyms of ‘cheat’. CON and DO are the biggest ones I think you’ll see in cryptics and you should be on guard for both.

As I said, I’d never heard of AIRCON but it’s clearly a shortening of ‘air conditioning’.

23 Extremes of emotion left expert in bind (6)

ENLACE is not super common., but one thing you develop a taste for in cryptics is getting a sense of whether something is a word. (‘En’ is a prefix that can be put on a verb that achieves a change in state.) This tip won’t work for Mephisto puzzles, or monthly specials, or even for many 15x15s, but with Quickies it’s definitely a skill to use.

But again, with Quickies, you can count on the wordplay 100%. ‘Extremes of emotion’ cannot mean anything but EN, that is, the first and last letters of the word ‘enlace’. The word ‘left’ cannot mean anything in this context but L or PORT. If ENPORT was a word, or ‘expert in bind’ could possibly be the definition, we’d be in a bind indeed! But those don’t pass muster.

So we have ENL _ _ _ and what remains is ‘expert’ and the definition is ‘bind’. ‘Expert’ = ACE is very common and one to put in your journal of common short words and abbreviations.

The moral of the story is: wordplay wordplay wordplay.

Down

2 Ministerial oversight? (8.5)

Not much to say about this one. You’ll need some checkers, and you’ll need to know the expression. Also it’s important to recognize that, given the question mark and the number of words, this is likely a cheeky definition. I had C _ E _ I _ A _ and thinking of ‘ministerial’ made me think of CLERICAL, but still I didn’t get the joke until I started writing it in.

3 Detachment from delegation escorting French playwright (7)

I got this one from crossing letters (even though I don’t know a thing about IONESCO other than I’ve seen his name before), so I won’t be of much help. I didn’t even realize this was a hidden word clue.

But here’s what I’ll say. If you’re struggling with Quickies, start focusing on improving your recognition of hidden words and anagrams. Both of these put the letters for the answer right in front of you, and if you can get better at these you’ll get more footholds into puzzles.

6 One of four in “Sunday best” turned up before interval (8,5)

Again a hard one to give advice for. Clues about grammatical terms (‘a’ for INDEFINITE ARTICLE or ‘went, for example’ for VERB) or punctuation are tricky, as they are super super meta. But when you see ‘one of four’, you’ve gotta start thinking, especially in a Quickie, “Okay, what are there four of?”. The only thing is the punctuation mark.

Unfortunately, ‘interval’ for COMMA is super vague, so if you don’t know the term, you’re gonna have trouble here.

9 Large seat in crimson given a new home? (9)

I don’t know what problem you had here, but it is absolutely crucial to know that in a Quickie puzzle, ‘crimson’ = RED, and the definition is ‘given a new home’, which means that the answer has to be:

RE _ _ _ _ _ ED

because ‘in’ must mean that we’re putting ‘large seat’ inside RED, and ‘given a new home’ 100% means that the answer is RE+(past tense verb). Being on the lookout for RE+(verb) definitions is definitely part of any crossword solvers bag of tricks (even US-style crosswords).

So, did you get that far? If you got that far and you still didn’t get the answer, pat yourself on the back. You’re doing well! If you didn’t, take note of these wordplay aspects I take for granted, and get them in your system!

14 Prejudiced, dismissing head craftsman (7)

Hard to get without checkers, but hopefully you know that the answer means ‘craftsman’, and is obtained by removing the first letter of a word meaning ‘prejudiced’.

15 A cactus chopped in half, one by a shrub

You will never see ‘chopped in half’ in a 15×15. So as a solver of quickies, you must latch on to this hint and realize that ‘cactus chopped in half’ must give CAC or TUS. This means that the first ‘a’ must mean A, so the answer is either ACAC _ _ or ATUS _ _ . Did you get that far?

The next words are ‘one by a’, and in a Quickie, ‘one’ must mean I, and ‘a’ must mean A. So the answer is ACACIA or ATUSIA, and if you got that far and needed to look up both in a dictionary, again, pat yourself on the back because you’re doing great!

This clue is very different from 14 Down, which requires you to pluck 7- and 8-letter words out of your mind with only a one-word synonym to help. There isn’t a single part of the wordplay in 15 Down which requires you to know the definition of any word. It is all wordplay, and if you weren’t aware of that, ask yourself how you got off track.

16 One lent money, behold, a necessity, almost (6)

When you see ‘almost’ in a Quickie, you 100% can conclude that ‘necessity, almost’ means a synonym for ’necessity’ minus the last letter. You gotta lock into that right away.

That means the definition must be ‘one lent money’, and note that this can never ever ever in a crossword mean LOANER, because definitions are always given in the present tense (“one who lends money”) unless the past tense is part of the definition. That’s a convention of crossword puzzles and if you didn’t know it, now you do!

So, it must mean ‘one who has been lent money’, which is surely crossword-ese for something ending in -EE.

But I’d start with ‘behold’, which in a Quickie is 100% going to be LO. It’s archaic but you gotta know it. Then of course ‘a’ must be A, so we have LOA _ _ _ , and now we’re well on our way.

I don’t think this would be allowed in US-style puzzles because LOANEE and ‘lent’ share a word root.

18 Payload missing odd parts on second mission (5)

If you didn’t immediately recognize this as a hidden letters clue, you gotta up your game! When you see ‘every other part’ or ‘missing odd parts’, go straight to the word and write down what you get: pAyLoAd -> ALA _ _ .

What’s left is ‘on second mission’. Could the answer be ‘second mission’? Then ‘on’ could be ON or RE. Could the answer be ALARE? ALAON?

Alternatively, the missing two letters could come from ‘second’, and in a Quickie, ‘second’ will always be S or MO (for ‘moment’). If you don’t know these, learn them!

78 comments on “Times Quick Cryptic No 1272 by Alconiere”

  1. 10 minutes. Something going on here as all the words around the edges are made up from the letters in ALCONIERE which dominate throughout the rest of the puzzle too. CLERICAL ERROR, CLEANER and CIRCA are three more answers containing only those letters.

    Edited at 2019-01-23 06:26 am (UTC)

    1. Well … having converted to Catholicism (20ac), Alconiere ended his days as a cleric – so he was CLERIC AL. (And MINISTER(i)AL to boot.)

      The puzzle contains numerous forwards or backwards ALs – cue bALl, enLAce, ALarm, ecLAir, ALamo (plus an AL in the first row of the unchers, and an AL going upwards in the first column of the unchers, and an AL in the clue in 7dn). This may be a hallmark – his puzzle 391 included ALMIGHTY, ALL THERE, and RALLY eg.

      Since Alconiere was a painter, the ART in ARTISAN might be another nod. He also counterfeited banknotes – the “forger” in 10ac?

      Alternatively, I’ve seriously over-read this!

      Templar

  2. About 8 minutes for me. I think it would be clearer if you made the hidden answers (ANVIL, IONESCO) clearer by using lowercase for the letters that don’t form part of the hidden answer.

    My LOI was AIRCON too, mainly because I though AIR+CON…that’s not a word. Well, it isn’t really, but I twigged.

    I don’t see why TACHO would need a question mark, any more than the previous clue since a billiard player needs more than the cue ball. A cue for example.

  3. Like Paul, my LOI was AIRCON, and for the same reason. (And I agree with Paul about displaying hiddens.) Also NHO TACHO, so slow to pick that one up. Slow to spot IONESCO–well, I’m always slow on hiddens–because I would have said he was Romanian; which of course he was, but ‘French’ is appropriate also. And ‘bind’ struck me as a bit off as a def of ENLACE, but. 7:25.
  4. I think the instrument in a lorry refers to a tachograph rather than a tachometer, as a car could also have a tachometer, whereas a tachograph is specific to HGVs to record the hours driven. “The law states that the weight of the trailer must be added to the gross vehicle weight of the van. So if the van has a gvw of 3.5 tonnes and it’s towing a two-tonne trailer, the vehicle effectively weighs 5.5 tonnes and must have a tachograph – and you’ll need an O-licence to operate it too.” I was held up by my LOI, ENLACE as I’d put LOANER for 16d. I interpreted “one lent”, as “one did loan” originally. 11:40. Thanks Alconiere and Jeremy.
  5. 15:36 for me after correcting some self-inflicted wounds.
    I had ABOUT TURN at 13a for a long time -rushing.I avoided Loaner but had Artiste at 14d, another rushed answer. LOI was Enlace for that reasons. A few delays at the end e.g. Aircon and was puzzled by Tacho but thought of it quickly.
    Good to be reminded of Racine. David
  6. So far this week I have managed for the first time to finish both days. Today’s was just bizarre and I thought the clues poor and the puzzle really hard as a result. Not even 50% done. The blogger thought this easy as did a few others so I would be really interested to hear from some real beginner solvers. Could be just me.

    Tim

    1. I thought it was hard with some rather unlikely words for a QC such as RACINE, IONESCO, LOANEE and ENLACE, so that I’m still convinced there was something else going on in the setter’s mind – an agenda of some sort – as mentioned in my original posting above. All may become clear later – or not. There was some very tricky wordplay too – the ‘ladies dancing’ and the punctuation mark reference at 6dn. Anyway you have my sympathy for finding it hard. Best just put it down to experience though. Onwards and upwards!

      Edited at 2019-01-23 07:47 am (UTC)

    2. Hello, I’m a relative beginner too and found this really difficult – I gave up after about 30 minutes and came on here, and always slightly pacified to find others in the same boat!
      1. Would also add that googling “charlady definition” comes up with the answer “a charwoman”, and as I don’t have a Chambers dictionary to hand with me on the bus in the morning, this is about as far as I’m likely to go to find out what a charlady is

        *shrugs shoulders*

    3. Also DNF! Needed blog for enlace and cheated by googling French playwrights to get Ionesco. A challenging 50 mins. Nevertheless I enjoyed it, thanks as ever to blogger and setter.
      Frankyanne
    4. Definitely a struggle. Knew Racine but other strange words crept in.

      Would really like to aspire to the dizzy heights of the SCC!

      Edited at 2019-01-23 07:05 pm (UTC)

  7. 30 minutes and felt tough.

    Didnt get the nine ladies dancing ref.
    Biffed samurai.
    Couldn’t parse inv comma.
    Didnt really understand clerical error.
    Racine, not keen on anagrams cluing obscure words.

    Liked nails, cue ball and dust man.
    Thanks

  8. Agree with others, some of this was more suited to the 15×15 than the QC – LOANEE, RACINE, IONESCO, I’m looking at you in particular, with a mention in dispatches to the “quotation marks” (see what I did there?)

    A TACHO to the best of my knowledge is common usage for the tachograph as has been discussed earlier – a tachometer in a car would more commonly be called a rev counter.

    4.33 – so an improvement on my “what time have other people done so what sort of target should I look at” scale* which today came in at 5 minutes.

    *this is a completely arbitrary scale that only exists in my head. Which is place you don’t want to be going.

  9. Circa 14 mins. LOI 6d INVERTED COMMA after 19a TACHO. I guessed RACINE and IONESCO and while the wordplay is fair I do not think the words belong in a QC. I biffed NAILS as I DNK quick is the skin under finger and toe nails although I now understand the phrase ‘cut to the quick’. I’m another one who struggled with the spelling of SAMURAI but even if I had got it right first time to assist with solving 6d I would still have been well outside my target of 10 mins. Not a straightforward solve for me.
  10. 29 minutes for me and I found this difficult too, with some challenging clueing and some slightly obscure answers. I’m another who didn’t really get 2d.
  11. Completely foxed by this, finally stopping the clock at almost three Kevins and a Bad Day. But I hugely enjoyed the puzzle, which I thought was witty and clever. Thank you Al! LOI AIRCON, as for others.

    I also enjoyed unpicking (or inventing) bits of Nina afterwards, whcih I have posted in reply to jack at the top.

    Thanks for the blog, Jeremy. I currently have ten new puppies so am empathising with your sleep deprivation.

    Templar

    Templar

  12. Quite a puzzle! Sucked in by a few easy ones and then reality set in. Some lovely clues – well worth going over again just to see some of the subtleties. I found myself in the SCC sitting between flashman and ant (above). A disappointing time at first but it was an enjoyable experience. LI were ALAMO and AIRCON. COD was INVERTED COMMA. Too many other nice clues to list. Many thanks to Alconiere and jeremy. John M.

    Edited at 2019-01-23 09:47 am (UTC)

  13. ….LOANEE, and it gave me food for thought on the totally different meaning at 16D.

    I don’t remember encountering Alconiere before (in any sense), and the clever marginal ploy passed me by as I whizzed through this.

    MER at INVERTED COMMA – punctuation tricks are
    maybe a touch OTT in a QC.

    FOI RECOIL
    LOI ENLACE
    COD NAILS
    TIME 4:02

  14. Can’t agree that this was straightforward – remember the SCC are here! Nonetheless very enjoyable even if I did make a bit of a mess, with LOANED for LOANEE holding up completion and one typo pink square for IINESCO leading to 21.09. CIRCA, ALAMO (DNK as mission), ENLACE, AIRCON accounted for circa 10 mins. Liked 4ac and 2dn. Interesting to see two French dramatists appear. I went to see Ionesco’s La Cantatrice Chauve in Paris once: an absurdist French version of the Mouse Trap, in that it has been showing continually since 1957. Pretentious moi?
      1. Interesting to go back and see when it first appeared. 19 Nov 2018 on an Izetti, shortly after I joined the blog and inspired by oldblighter who declared himself a slowcoach. I “joined” the club as one who generally completed within 15 to 20 mins but found it hard to break into the sub 10 brigade. I think I’ve done that three times since, so the practice and blog definitely helps.
  15. An enjoyable puzzle which I completed in 8:01. Some difficult vocabulary for a QC, I think. Loved the surface for 11a. Needed the blog to parse 6d. Thanks to Alconiere and Jeremy.

    Adrian

  16. 12 minutes, with nearly half spent on AIRCON, as couldn’t think of anything to fit checkers.
  17. Well I don’t mind admitting that I found this harder than the average QC. 23 minutes for me, and I don’t remember previously solving an Alconiere puzzle, but I could be wrong.

    With some classical content not usually encountered in the QC, and the slightly quirky sense of humour coming through the clues, I finished this with a distinct impression of our esteemed 15 x 15 Friday blogger, Verlaine. So much so that I wondered if he had turned his hand (and undoubted talents) to setting – poacher turned gamekeeper sort of thing.

    I’m probably way out of line, but the impression was strong enough for me to share it here.

    Good tough puzzle and good blog. Hopefully, things will be easier tomorrow when it is my turn to blog.

    1. For the record, Alconiere has set only 8 puzzles prior to today’s but over a long period starting in August 2014. His last appearance was 16 January 2018, so just over a year ago. Chris has blogged 6 of them!
  18. I thought some of the clues were very iffy for a QC, so I’m not surprised by some of the comments above from fellow SCC members. However, given the apparent theme that Jackkt and Templar have mentioned I think a degree of flexibility is just about allowable. Nevertheless, quite a challenge overall, and one that took me to just north of the 30min mark. Invariant
  19. I’m seeing that some newer solvers found this one quite difficult. Let’s pursue that discussion!

    Sometimes when I blog I lay out my complete solve. I can’t do that every time but I’m happy to go into some depth on certain clues. Can those who found this puzzle difficult ask some questions? Or talk about where you got stuck?

    One of the best ways to grow is to articulate where you are.

    1. As a newish solver and not exactly awash with the deeper knowledge of cryptics I just could not get a foothold anywhere. For me, once i get a few checkers in – I can battle my way through to about a 50% success rate and where i fail its usually a couple of unknowns and learnings on the parsing.

      Today with not enough checkers anywhere I could not get a grip. This was through a combination of missing the cryptic clueing which seemed tough to spot eg 4ac, 11ac, 20ac, 22ac, 2dn, 6dn, 9dn, 16dn and some slightly obscure answers namely 12ac, 23ac, 3dn, 14dn, 15dn.

      The combination defeated me today and while I like to learn new ways, ideally just a few per puzzle works best for me especially as it should attract those newish to cryptics while a pleasant warm up for the experts.

      That said – after reading this super blog it all makes perfect sense so I’ll crawl back under my rock and wait for a friendlier challenge.

      Best wishes
      Graham

    2. I really struggled with 18d and 22ac. Re 18d it was the last two letters I couldn’t get. 22ac for the same reason as others.

      I do appreciate the explanatory blogs you write…

      1. Let’s dig in!

        Across
        4 Caught a number of ladies dancing like German shepherds? (6)

        One thing you can usually count on with Quickies is that the wordplay is much more bald. (With the 15×15 puzzles, the setters do whatever they can to fool you into the wrong interpretation of wordplay indicators.) Use this to your advantage!

        So, for example, when you see ‘caught’ as the first word, it might be the definition, but most likely it indicates that C is the first letter of the answer. Write down ‘C’. Put it on the page so your mind starts searching for answers.

        Another thing you can count on with Times puzzles (Quickies or 15x15s) is that every word has a meaning. Therefore the word ‘a’ undoubtedly means A. So write it down!

        Now, I could be wrong. The answer could be ‘caught’, or ‘a’ could really be part of ‘a number’ which could clue TWO for all I know. But most likely, especially in a Quickie, these words indicate the little pieces we’ll use to put a word together.

        If CA _ _ _ _ is the answer, then the definition has something to do with German shepherds. Now’s the time to let the mind muse on words relating to dogs that begin with CA. If you think of CANINE, you can be sure it’s right, because NINE is a number and we’ve yet to decode the part of the clue that refers to ‘number’.

        Also, ‘number’ can indicate N, which might help you stumble into the answer.

        If you didn’t think of CANINE, then work on some of the crossing clues.

        Of course, ‘dancing’ could indicate an anagram, but none of the adjacent words have the right number of letters, so just cross out that possibility.

        11 What we have to protect quick fixes (5)

        I didn’t get what was going on with this one until writing the blog. I had some crossing letters, and was parsing it maybe as “What we have to protect / quick fixes”, and was thinking of NAILS as just something we use to protect ourselves. Only in writing the blog, and forcing myself to try to account for every word, did I realize how to parse the clue.

        12 Warriors from Asia, drunk with rum (7)

        Of course I can’t help if the word SAMURAI is obscure to you. I grew up in the 80s and 90s in the United States, and samurais were very popular in TV and in video games. Also, I have a weird brain that somehow recognizes RACINE and IONESCO without having read a word either of them wrote. Very very helpful for doing crossword puzzles.

        Where I can help is that you should absolutely absolutely absolutely know that the answer here is an anagram of ASIA+RUM. In a 15×15, the wordplay would be more subtle, but with a Quickie, you should feel 100% confident that the answer here is a word meaning ‘warriors’, and that the wordplay is an anagram of these letters. If you didn’t catch that, we gotta go back to basics! (Let me know, and I can try to help.)

        1. 20 US agents grabbing Catholic roughly (5)

          As before, ‘roughly’ could indicate an anagram, but since ‘Catholic’ doesn’t have the right number of letters, throw that idea straight out.

          ‘US agents’ is invariably CIA, which is a big hint. Maybe it could be FEDS or something but I’m not sure I’ve ever seen that. So, with a five-letter clue this is a huge hint, as the answer is either:

          C _ _ IA or CI _ _ A ,

          because ‘grabbing’ also will 100% in a Quickie indicate putting a word inside another. So you should definitely be writing C _ _ _ A into the grid.

          This means that the answer is ‘roughly’, and if you don’t know the word CIRCA, you ought to learn it, because using ‘about’, ‘around’, ‘roughly’, etc to indicate C or CA (abbreviations for ‘circa’) is a Cryptic Crossword chestnut.

          Alternatively, you might have know that RC is an abbreviation for (Roman) Catholic, although I would imagine this isn’t commonly used, even in the UK.

          22 Show cheat device for regulating temperature (6)

          Many solvers, myself included, mentioned that this was our last answer in. I’ve never heard of AIRCON and that’s not a term in the US as far as I know.

          The word ‘cheat’ is not part of the definition, because ‘show cheat’ is not a thing, and neither is ‘cheat device for regulating temperature’. Therefore the definition is either ‘show’ or ‘device for regulating temperature’, and this latter surely has to be it. If the answer was 10 letters we could just slam in THERMOSTAT.

          Okay, so we have a very reasonable guess for the definition. Therefore the wordplay must be “show cheat”, which 100% in a Quickie has to be a charades-style cluing where the answer is a synonym for ‘show’ + a synonym for ‘cheat’.

          If you have crossing clues as I did, you might have A _ R at the start, and ‘show’ = AIR is very common in these puzzles. Indeed, the word AIR is very very very common in cryptics, so you should be on guard for it. (It took me years to finally catch on to ‘key’ = ALT, but we have to get these things if we want to improve!)

          I had AIR _ O _ and was contemplating AIRBOX (still thinking of ‘thermostat’), and wondering if BOX was a synonym for ’cheat’. Finally I threw that out and just started thinking of synonyms of ‘cheat’. CON and DO are the biggest ones I think you’ll see in cryptics and you should be on guard for both.

          As I said, I’d never heard of AIRCON but it’s clearly a shortening of ‘air conditioning’.

          23 Extremes of emotion left expert in bind (6)

          ENLACE is not super common., but one thing you develop a taste for in cryptics is getting a sense of whether something is a word. (‘En’ is a prefix that can be put on a verb that achieves a change in state.) This tip won’t work for Mephisto puzzles, or monthly specials, or even for many 15x15s, but with Quickies it’s definitely a skill to use.

          But again, with Quickies, you can count on the wordplay 100%. ‘Extremes of emotion’ cannot mean anything but EN, that is, the first and last letters of the word ‘enlace’. The word ‘left’ cannot mean anything in this context but L or PORT. If ENPORT was a word, or ‘expert in bind’ could possibly be the definition, we’d be in a bind indeed! But those don’t pass muster.

          So we have ENL _ _ _ and what remains is ‘expert’ and the definition is ‘bind’. ‘Expert’ = ACE is very common and one to put in your journal of common short words and abbreviations.

          The moral of the story is: wordplay wordplay wordplay.

          1. Down

            2 Ministerial oversight? (8.5)

            Not much to say about this one. You’ll need some checkers, and you’ll need to know the expression. Also it’s important to recognize that, given the question mark and the number of words, this is likely a cheeky definition. I had C _ E _ I _ A _ and thinking of ‘ministerial’ made me think of CLERICAL, but still I didn’t get the joke until I started writing it in.

            3 Detachment from delegation escorting French playwright (7)

            I got this one from crossing letters (even though I don’t know a thing about IONESCO other than I’ve seen his name before), so I won’t be of much help. I didn’t even realize this was a hidden word clue.

            But here’s what I’ll say. If you’re struggling with Quickies, start focusing on improving your recognition of hidden words and anagrams. Both of these put the letters for the answer right in front of you, and if you can get better at these you’ll get more footholds into puzzles.

            6 One of four in “Sunday best” turned up before interval (8,5)

            Again a hard one to give advice for. Clues about grammatical terms (‘a’ for INDEFINITE ARTICLE or ‘went, for example’ for VERB) or punctuation are tricky, as they are super super meta. But when you see ‘one of four’, you’ve gotta start thinking, especially in a Quickie, “Okay, what are there four of?”. The only thing is the punctuation mark.

            Unfortunately, ‘interval’ for COMMA is super vague, so if you don’t know the term, you’re gonna have trouble here.

            9 Large seat in crimson given a new home? (9)

            I don’t know what problem you had here, but it is absolutely crucial to know that in a Quickie puzzle, ‘crimson’ = RED, and the definition is ‘given a new home’, which means that the answer has to be:

            RE _ _ _ _ _ ED

            because ‘in’ must mean that we’re putting ‘large seat’ inside RED, and ‘given a new home’ 100% means that the answer is RE+(past tense verb). Being on the lookout for RE+(verb) definitions is definitely part of any crossword solvers bag of tricks (even US-style crosswords).

            So, did you get that far? If you got that far and you still didn’t get the answer, pat yourself on the back. You’re doing well! If you didn’t, take note of these wordplay aspects I take for granted, and get them in your system!

            1. 14 Prejudiced, dismissing head craftsman (7)

              Hard to get without checkers, but hopefully you know that the answer means ‘craftsman’, and is obtained by removing the first letter of a word meaning ‘prejudiced’.

              15 A cactus chopped in half, one by a shrub

              You will never see ‘chopped in half’ in a 15×15. So as a solver of quickies, you must latch on to this hint and realize that ‘cactus chopped in half’ must give CAC or TUS. This means that the first ‘a’ must mean A, so the answer is either ACAC _ _ or ATUS _ _ . Did you get that far?

              The next words are ‘one by a’, and in a Quickie, ‘one’ must mean I, and ‘a’ must mean A. So the answer is ACACIA or ATUSIA, and if you got that far and needed to look up both in a dictionary, again, pat yourself on the back because you’re doing great!

              This clue is very different from 14 Down, which requires you to pluck 7- and 8-letter words out of your mind with only a one-word synonym to help. There isn’t a single part of the wordplay in 15 Down which requires you to know the definition of any word. It is all wordplay, and if you weren’t aware of that, ask yourself how you got off track.

              16 One lent money, behold, a necessity, almost (6)

              When you see ‘almost’ in a Quickie, you 100% can conclude that ‘necessity, almost’ means a synonym for ’necessity’ minus the last letter. You gotta lock into that right away.

              That means the definition must be ‘one lent money’, and note that this can never ever ever in a crossword mean LOANER, because definitions are always given in the present tense (“one who lends money”) unless the past tense is part of the definition. That’s a convention of crossword puzzles and if you didn’t know it, now you do!

              So, it must mean ‘one who has been lent money’, which is surely crossword-ese for something ending in -EE.

              But I’d start with ‘behold’, which in a Quickie is 100% going to be LO. It’s archaic but you gotta know it. Then of course ‘a’ must be A, so we have LOA _ _ _ , and now we’re well on our way.

              I don’t think this would be allowed in US-style puzzles because LOANEE and ‘lent’ share a word root.

              18 Payload missing odd parts on second mission (5)

              If you didn’t immediately recognize this as a hidden letters clue, you gotta up your game! When you see ‘every other part’ or ‘missing odd parts’, go straight to the word and write down what you get: pAyLoAd -> ALA _ _ .

              What’s left is ‘on second mission’. Could the answer be ‘second mission’? Then ‘on’ could be ON or RE. Could the answer be ALARE? ALAON?

              Alternatively, the missing two letters could come from ‘second’, and in a Quickie, ‘second’ will always be S or MO (for ‘moment’). If you don’t know these, learn them!

        1. Thank you very much for the extensive explanations. I clearly have some way to go on learning the tricks of the trade – but remembering to use every word certainly helps.

          Graham

        2. Thanks, that’s interesting stuff…

          I had no problem with Racine – being a fan of Faure’s ‘Cantique de Jean Racine’ (it’s beautiful, check it out on YouTube ,if you don’t know it). Also ‘Artisan’ is a very ‘in’ concept in the UK at the moment – ‘Artisan Bakers’, for example, so that was straightforward.

          ‘RC’ is (or always used to be) a common abbreviation for Roman Catholic, as CofE is for Church of England… so that’s OK for me.

          The problem with 18a was that I didn’t twig that Alamo was a mission, I think of it as a fort…

          1. One of the skills I talked about it my writeup is developing that sense of plausibility. If you’ve heard of the Alamo, and the wordplay is giving you ALAMO, and you know of it as a fort, but it’s being clued as ‘mission’, then that all seems plausible.

            And then (echoing what I said to another commenter): If you’re not yet solving the puzzle regularly, do a Google search for “alamo mission” and confirm what you suspect is true. Once you start solving the puzzle regularly with aids like this, try doing one without so you can learn to trust your sensibilities.

            ‘Artisan’ is pretty in here, too, but usually it’s seen in the form ‘artisanal’: artisanal cheese, artisanal bread, artisanal beer, etc. I wonder what that preference for different parts of speech says about our cultures. Hm.

  20. Change to routine so a lunchtime not a breakfast solve. So it could be biorhythms but I found this to be the hardest in ages and ages, a massive DNF. NE was my biggest problem which I can blame on ignorance of French literature and a lack of checkers for the hidden. Thanks for blog which I needed to parse lots of answers. Hoping for better things tomorrow.
  21. 23 minutes for me but pleased to finish. Artisan now becoming familiar. Got Cueball (nearly falling for red ball) then knew it must be Settled but convinced Settee had to be in there. I suppose Ministerial like Admin like Cleric gets there.
    Two unknown Frenchmen needed checking before writing in.
    Very good though all round
    Thanks all
    John George
    1. I think it is clerical as in minister of religion ministerial. Found this not so much hard as awkward – I thought a lot of the parsing was weak, which together with the use of obscure words meant that I had little confidence without the checkers. Some seemed to be poorly clued eg 12a where I would read “Asia drunk with rum” as not including rum in the anagrist but suggesting it would be used as is – surely “drunk knocking back rum” would be better. Equally for 6d I can’t see 4 inverted commas, just a pair of quotation marks.
      Pwliv
      1. “X mixed with Y” is a common way to clue an anagram of the letters and X and Y together. In general, one of the hurdles of solving a cryptic is becoming more keyed in to the various ways wordplay can be indicated. We’re all used to “asia rum mixed” — now you see one way the anagrist can appear non-consecutively. It’s very common so keep that one in mind!

        ‘Inverted commas’ is British English for ‘quotation marks’, as far as I know.

    2. … or you could just have Minister = Priest ( = Clerk in Holy Orders), ie the religious sense of clerical
  22. Far too many tricks for me to handle. Even after 3 years practice this was a DNF (first for some time) with half a dozen clues I would not have solved in a lifetime. Enjoyed the wordplay when I could understand it though. Thanks to the blogger for the explanations.
  23. It seems that what makes a QC tough for newer solvers isn’t necessarily immediately obvious to the more experienced guys. I found this really difficult indeed and needed two separate sittings to churn through it taking about 45 mins (maybe a bit more).

    Apart from the obvious difficulty of the two Frenchmen in the NW corner I believe that 2 down was tough for a QC. I had guessed at 1d from the letters but I didn’t want to check if I was right via google – is it acceptable to check such an answer before writing in or should one pencil in the answer and just crack on?

    I also wonder if the interpretation and understanding of punctuation marks makes a difference. Until recently I found them no help at all and only recently can derive any benefit at all from them. I wonder if other inexperienced solvers have the same issue or I’m in splendid isolation on that?.

    Other than those things I couldn’t readily describe why I felt it was tough and I almost gave up completely but had a sense of satisfaction from finishing so am glad I muddled on.

    Edited at 2019-01-23 05:02 pm (UTC)

    1. One can occasionally fall into a trap (as in 6dn today, perhaps) but as a general rule it’s not a bad idea just to ignore punctuation in clues as, more often than not, it’s either irrelevant or deliberately placed to mislead the solver.
    2. If the punctuation marks are helpful, you’re lucky. In fact, in my case, if the punctuation marks are helpful, I’m UNLUCKY, because I’m always looking for parsings that go across the comma or em-dash, etc. The indicator words are all that matter.

      As for checking answers, if you’re just getting started, ABSOLUTELY look things up!! When you start finishing the puzzle regularly, put away Google and dictionaries as a challenge.

      There are some cryptics that can only be solved with dictionaries.

      1. The commas offer me no help at all unfortunately. What I should have said really was that question marks now help a bit when previously I found them useless.

        I guess I’m neither a true beginner nor particularly experienced which makes the use of tools checking answers a bit of a dilemma…. I only use it to check if something I think is right is in fact so – such as a French dramatist I’d never heard of but spotted from the rest of the clue. I am trying to wean myself off this crutch on the QC but today I must confess I buckled.

        On the 15×15 (which I don’t always attempt – normally just early in the week when they are a bit milder) or the Saturday Jumbo, I verify more as I am less likely to be able to use the other clues to be sure of spellings or if the bloke actually existed etc.

        1. Oh, good point! Question marks can indeed be helpful. I’ll try to underline that more in the future.

          Commas, on the other hand, are almost never helpful.

          Whether you consider yourself to be a beginner or expert is pretty irrelevant. Go by your performance on the puzzle. If you can consistently complete the puzzle “with aids”, that is the time to start challenging yourself with a “solo solve”. (In my opinion.)

  24. I’d describe it as a little quirky but not really obscure. Once I began to get the sense of humour/style I really enjoyed this puzzle for on one of our less frequent setters. 2d was my favourite. 16d seemed a made-up word to me but there was no other option. Sized up with 18d and sought inspiration in aids and just couldn’t see 22a aircon until the blog. Happy to see more of these. Took ages over a few attempts but sorry to put my pen down.
  25. We join those finding this on the hard side again over our vague target. Needed a break for tea to complete the last few clues, 6d,23a, 4a. Again, a challenging puzzle, but no worse for that. Thanks to setter and all contributors, we always enjoy the comments.
  26. I thought there were some tricky clues in here today, with the two unknown Frenchmen causing some head scratching. I managed to construct CANINE from the start of the wordplay but the reference to dancing ladies passed me by completely. ENLACE wasn’t a word I’d come across and looks a bit wrong to me. All of this meant that I pressed the submit button with fingers crossed and was mightily relieved not to see any pink squares. Completed in 14.38 with LOI AIRCON.
    Thanks for the blog
  27. I thought that there were too many words from the American English variant
    About face (turn)
    Loanee
  28. As a relative newby I found it hard and at times frustrating.There was the Satisfaction of biffing the clue only to find it got you nowhere.Agree about Loanee never heard that used anywhere before.I think Tacho is tough too can’t think of many lay people who would know that.Perhaps need more puzzles from Alconiere to acclimatise.Thanks for the blog.
  29. Quite often I struggle with the puzzle, take a break, have a walk or whatever and return to it and often finish it or get very close.
    Today, no chance . 1945 Hrs and still eight unanswered. So I look up this blog. Still non the wiser on four of them even having read the explanations. Hey ho – there’s always tomorrow. I do get a lot of pleasure doing these by the way.
    However, if someone can complete this in 4 mins 02 seconds I would not bother. It take me that long to read the clues!
  30. As a beginner I found it extremely tough. Only about two thirds complete before I gave up. Quite a few tricky ones in there I thought and a couple I’m struggling to parse with the answers and the blog.
    1. I’ve amended the blog to dig deeper on some clues. Let me know if that helps.

      If you need more help, call out some clue numbers.

  31. 23 minutes for me but pleased to finish. Artisan now becoming familiar. Got Cueball (nearly falling for red ball) then knew it must be Settled but convinced Settee had to be in there. I suppose Ministerial like Admin like Cleric gets there.
    Two unknown Frenchmen needed checking before writing in.
    Very good though all round
    Thanks all
    John George
  32. Let’s dig in!

    Across
    4 Caught a number of ladies dancing like German shepherds? (6)

    One thing you can usually count on with Quickies is that the wordplay is much more bald. (With the 15×15 puzzles, the setters do whatever they can to fool you into the wrong interpretation of wordplay indicators.) Use this to your advantage!

    So, for example, when you see ‘caught’ as the first word, it might be the definition, but most likely it indicates that C is the first letter of the answer. Write down ‘C’. Put it on the page so your mind starts searching for answers.

    Another thing you can count on with Times puzzles (Quickies or 15x15s) is that every word has a meaning. Therefore the word ‘a’ undoubtedly means A. So write it down!

    Now, I could be wrong. The answer could be ‘caught’, or ‘a’ could really be part of ‘a number’ which could clue TWO for all I know. But most likely, especially in a Quickie, these words indicate the little pieces we’ll use to put a word together.

    If CA _ _ _ _ is the answer, then the definition has something to do with German shepherds. Now’s the time to let the mind muse on words relating to dogs that begin with CA. If you think of CANINE, you can be sure it’s right, because NINE is a number and we’ve yet to decode the part of the clue that refers to ‘number’.

    Also, ‘number’ can indicate N, which might help you stumble into the answer.

    If you didn’t think of CANINE, then work on some of the crossing clues.

    Of course, ‘dancing’ could indicate an anagram, but none of the adjacent words have the right number of letters, so just cross out that possibility.

    11 What we have to protect quick fixes (5)

    I didn’t get what was going on with this one until writing the blog. I had some crossing letters, and was parsing it maybe as “What we have to protect / quick fixes”, and was thinking of NAILS as just something we use to protect ourselves. Only in writing the blog, and forcing myself to try to account for every word, did I realize how to parse the clue.

    12 Warriors from Asia, drunk with rum (7)

    Of course I can’t help if the word SAMURAI is obscure to you. I grew up in the 80s and 90s in the United States, and samurais were very popular in TV and in video games. Also, I have a weird brain that somehow recognizes RACINE and IONESCO without having read a word either of them wrote. Very very helpful for doing crossword puzzles.

    Where I can help is that you should absolutely absolutely absolutely know that the answer here is an anagram of ASIA+RUM. In a 15×15, the wordplay would be more subtle, but with a Quickie, you should feel 100% confident that the answer here is a word meaning ‘warriors’, and that the wordplay is an anagram of these letters. If you didn’t catch that, we gotta go back to basics! (Let me know, and I can try to help.)

    1. 20 US agents grabbing Catholic roughly (5)

      As before, ‘roughly’ could indicate an anagram, but since ‘Catholic’ doesn’t have the right number of letters, throw that idea straight out.

      ‘US agents’ is invariably CIA, which is a big hint. Maybe it could be FEDS or something but I’m not sure I’ve ever seen that. So, with a five-letter clue this is a huge hint, as the answer is either:

      C _ _ IA or CI _ _ A ,

      because ‘grabbing’ also will 100% in a Quickie indicate putting a word inside another. So you should definitely be writing C _ _ _ A into the grid.

      This means that the answer is ‘roughly’, and if you don’t know the word CIRCA, you ought to learn it, because using ‘about’, ‘around’, ‘roughly’, etc to indicate C or CA (abbreviations for ‘circa’) is a Cryptic Crossword chestnut.

      Alternatively, you might have know that RC is an abbreviation for (Roman) Catholic, although I would imagine this isn’t commonly used, even in the UK.

      22 Show cheat device for regulating temperature (6)

      Many solvers, myself included, mentioned that this was our last answer in. I’ve never heard of AIRCON and that’s not a term in the US as far as I know.

      The word ‘cheat’ is not part of the definition, because ‘show cheat’ is not a thing, and neither is ‘cheat device for regulating temperature’. Therefore the definition is either ‘show’ or ‘device for regulating temperature’, and this latter surely has to be it. If the answer was 10 letters we could just slam in THERMOSTAT.

      Okay, so we have a very reasonable guess for the definition. Therefore the wordplay must be “show cheat”, which 100% in a Quickie has to be a charades-style cluing where the answer is a synonym for ‘show’ + a synonym for ‘cheat’.

      If you have crossing clues as I did, you might have A _ R at the start, and ‘show’ = AIR is very common in these puzzles. Indeed, the word AIR is very very very common in cryptics, so you should be on guard for it. (It took me years to finally catch on to ‘key’ = ALT, but we have to get these things if we want to improve!)

      I had AIR _ O _ and was contemplating AIRBOX (still thinking of ‘thermostat’), and wondering if BOX was a synonym for ’cheat’. Finally I threw that out and just started thinking of synonyms of ‘cheat’. CON and DO are the biggest ones I think you’ll see in cryptics and you should be on guard for both.

      As I said, I’d never heard of AIRCON but it’s clearly a shortening of ‘air conditioning’.

      23 Extremes of emotion left expert in bind (6)

      ENLACE is not super common., but one thing you develop a taste for in cryptics is getting a sense of whether something is a word. (‘En’ is a prefix that can be put on a verb that achieves a change in state.) This tip won’t work for Mephisto puzzles, or monthly specials, or even for many 15x15s, but with Quickies it’s definitely a skill to use.

      But again, with Quickies, you can count on the wordplay 100%. ‘Extremes of emotion’ cannot mean anything but EN, that is, the first and last letters of the word ‘enlace’. The word ‘left’ cannot mean anything in this context but L or PORT. If ENPORT was a word, or ‘expert in bind’ could possibly be the definition, we’d be in a bind indeed! But those don’t pass muster.

      So we have ENL _ _ _ and what remains is ‘expert’ and the definition is ‘bind’. ‘Expert’ = ACE is very common and one to put in your journal of common short words and abbreviations.

      The moral of the story is: wordplay wordplay wordplay.

      1. Down

        2 Ministerial oversight? (8.5)

        Not much to say about this one. You’ll need some checkers, and you’ll need to know the expression. Also it’s important to recognize that, given the question mark and the number of words, this is likely a cheeky definition. I had C _ E _ I _ A _ and thinking of ‘ministerial’ made me think of CLERICAL, but still I didn’t get the joke until I started writing it in.

        3 Detachment from delegation escorting French playwright (7)

        I got this one from crossing letters (even though I don’t know a thing about IONESCO other than I’ve seen his name before), so I won’t be of much help. I didn’t even realize this was a hidden word clue.

        But here’s what I’ll say. If you’re struggling with Quickies, start focusing on improving your recognition of hidden words and anagrams. Both of these put the letters for the answer right in front of you, and if you can get better at these you’ll get more footholds into puzzles.

        6 One of four in “Sunday best” turned up before interval (8,5)

        Again a hard one to give advice for. Clues about grammatical terms (‘a’ for INDEFINITE ARTICLE or ‘went, for example’ for VERB) or punctuation are tricky, as they are super super meta. But when you see ‘one of four’, you’ve gotta start thinking, especially in a Quickie, “Okay, what are there four of?”. The only thing is the punctuation mark.

        Unfortunately, ‘interval’ for COMMA is super vague, so if you don’t know the term, you’re gonna have trouble here.

        9 Large seat in crimson given a new home? (9)

        I don’t know what problem you had here, but it is absolutely crucial to know that in a Quickie puzzle, ‘crimson’ = RED, and the definition is ‘given a new home’, which means that the answer has to be:

        RE _ _ _ _ _ ED

        because ‘in’ must mean that we’re putting ‘large seat’ inside RED, and ‘given a new home’ 100% means that the answer is RE+(past tense verb). Being on the lookout for RE+(verb) definitions is definitely part of any crossword solvers bag of tricks (even US-style crosswords).

        So, did you get that far? If you got that far and you still didn’t get the answer, pat yourself on the back. You’re doing well! If you didn’t, take note of these wordplay aspects I take for granted, and get them in your system!

        14 Prejudiced, dismissing head craftsman (7)

        Hard to get without checkers, but hopefully you know that the answer means ‘craftsman’, and is obtained by removing the first letter of a word meaning ‘prejudiced’.

        15 A cactus chopped in half, one by a shrub

        You will never see ‘chopped in half’ in a 15×15. So as a solver of quickies, you must latch on to this hint and realize that ‘cactus chopped in half’ must give CAC or TUS. This means that the first ‘a’ must mean A, so the answer is either ACAC _ _ or ATUS _ _ . Did you get that far?

        The next words are ‘one by a’, and in a Quickie, ‘one’ must mean I, and ‘a’ must mean A. So the answer is ACACIA or ATUSIA, and if you got that far and needed to look up both in a dictionary, again, pat yourself on the back because you’re doing great!

        This clue is very different from 14 Down, which requires you to pluck 7- and 8-letter words out of your mind with only a one-word synonym to help. There isn’t a single part of the wordplay in 15 Down which requires you to know the definition of any word. It is all wordplay, and if you weren’t aware of that, ask yourself how you got off track.

        1. 16 One lent money, behold, a necessity, almost (6)

          When you see ‘almost’ in a Quickie, you 100% can conclude that ‘necessity, almost’ means a synonym for ’necessity’ minus the last letter. You gotta lock into that right away.

          That means the definition must be ‘one lent money’, and note that this can never ever ever in a crossword mean LOANER, because definitions are always given in the present tense (“one who lends money”) unless the past tense is part of the definition. That’s a convention of crossword puzzles and if you didn’t know it, now you do!

          So, it must mean ‘one who has been lent money’, which is surely crossword-ese for something ending in -EE.

          But I’d start with ‘behold’, which in a Quickie is 100% going to be LO. It’s archaic but you gotta know it. Then of course ‘a’ must be A, so we have LOA _ _ _ , and now we’re well on our way.

          I don’t think this would be allowed in US-style puzzles because LOANEE and ‘lent’ share a word root.

          18 Payload missing odd parts on second mission (5)

          If you didn’t immediately recognize this as a hidden letters clue, you gotta up your game! When you see ‘every other part’ or ‘missing odd parts’, go straight to the word and write down what you get: pAyLoAd -> ALA _ _ .

          What’s left is ‘on second mission’. Could the answer be ‘second mission’? Then ‘on’ could be ON or RE. Could the answer be ALARE? ALAON?

          Alternatively, the missing two letters could come from ‘second’, and in a Quickie, ‘second’ will always be S or MO (for ‘moment’). If you don’t know these, learn them!

  33. “‘missing odd parts’, go straight to the word and write down what you get: pAyLoAd -> ALA _ _ .”

    I got that but I’m always confused as to whether it’s just from the one word or might it be several words?? Same with ‘extremely’. Is there a rule of thumb??

    1. It can always be multiple words unless it’s specifically a singular like “head of …”. But the syntax will make sense. The same is true of reversals. “X on Y back” could be either X + (Y reversed) or (X + Y) reversed.

      The trap is to let the existence of multiple options prevent you from considering either. Consider both. Write them down on the page in the margin. Once the jumble gets out of your head, it will most likely be much clearer.

      “Payload missing odd parts on second mission” … I suppose this could be:

      Payload / missing odd parts, ON SECOND MISSION

      which would yield oN sEcOnD mIsSiOn -> NEODIO … nope, that’s not right. It usually only takes a second to dismiss an incorrect parsing… in a Quickie that is!

      But you bring up a good question, so point some of these out to me in the future and we can discuss them!

  34. As a relative but improving newbie, was ecstatic to finish this. Took an absolute age and two sittings, but hey! Still picking up some of the tricks of the trade, so a detailed blog is of huge assistance, thanks.
  35. Many thanks for the helpful hints but I just cannot understand 2d and especially 6d. What has “Sunday best” to do with the answer? If these puzzles continue to get harder and harder then I for one will give up. I do not regard them as a training ground for the 15×15 as I heartily dislike that puzzle and have no intention of ever doing one.
    1. No chance of helping you if you comment as anonymous. If you happen to see this reply, post logged in so I can actually reply and give you help. Though it seems like you don’t really want it, and that you’re over this puzzle. Not every puzzle is for everyone!
      1. I have found it impossible to log in, hence I remain anonymous. Thanks for your offer of help but as I can’t log in and you won’t help anonymous people let’s just move on.

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