Today’s quick crossword is from Alfie, a setter who always (under that pseudonym) provides a crossword with an alphabetical twist. And indeed this one has too, as hinted at by 1A and 11A. I’ll not spoil it for you here if you haven’t looked for what’s hidden in the grid, but I’ve summarised what I found at the end of the blog.
As for the clues, one or two are a bit tricky (15D puzzled me the most) and the crossword took me rather over my average time, finishing in 6:40. Some fun clues though. My COD goes to 8A, but the cleverly worked theme is most entertaining. Thank-you Alfie! How did everyone else get on?
Fortnightly Weekend Quick Cryptic. This time it is my turn to provide the weekend entertainment. You can find my amateur quick crossword here. Enjoy!
Definitions underlined in bold italics, (Abc)* indicating anagram of Abc, deletions and [] other indicators.
| Across | |
| 1 | All the letters of Plath Bea devoured (8) |
| ALPHABET – (Plath Bea)* [devoured]. | |
| 5 | A long time back for example visiting S Africa (4) |
| AGES – E.G (for example) inside [visiting] S.A. (South Africa) all reversed [back] -> AGES. | |
| 8 | Biblical book, or endless ditty performed by a single monk? (4,2,7) |
|
SONG OF SOLOMON – SONG (ditty) OF SOLO MON |
|
| 10 | After gym, sip fizzy soft drink (5) |
| PEPSI – P.E. (physical education; gym) (sip)* [fizzy]. | |
| 11 | Pine, silver, originally orange in the distant past (4-3) |
| LONG-AGO – LONG (pine) AG (chemical symbol for silver) and the first letter of Orange [originally]. | |
| 12 | Reaper, gutless: sarcastic, yet handsome (6) |
| SCYTHE – Outside letters of [gutless] SarcastiC YeT HandsomE. | |
| 13 | Name of female in Grammar School? (6) |
| GLADYS – LADY (female) [in] G.S. (Grammar School). | |
| 16 | Wooden strip containing medal found in London borough (7) |
| LAMBETH – LATH (wooden strip) [containing] MBE (medal). | |
| 18 | Dog seen in Soho, undernourished (5) |
| HOUND – Hidden [seen in] soHO UNDernourished. | |
| 20 | Hunters battle, frantically, to go from disadvantage to advantage? (4,3,6) |
| TURN THE TABLES – (Hunters battle)* [frantically]. | |
| 21 | Minor mistake to knock back this beer? (4) |
| PILS – SLIP (minor mistake) reversed [knock back] -> PILS. | |
| 22 | Nearly one hundred years to capture a small race of “horsemen” (8) |
|
CENTAURS – CENTUR |
|
| Down | |
| 1 | Old storyteller regularly made use of PA (5) |
| AESOP – Alternate letters [regularly] of mAdE uSe Of PA. | |
| 2 | Impressive display of work left in Pennsylvania and New York (7) |
| PANOPLY – OP (opus;work) L (left) in PA (Pennsylvania) NY (New York) | |
| 3 | Doctor hasn’t mobile, leading to cancellation (11) |
| ABOLISHMENT – [doctor] (hasn’t mobile)*. Nice surface. | |
| 4 | Undoubtedly like one to visit cathedral city (6) |
| EASILY – AS (like) I (one) in [to visit] ELY (cathedral city). | |
| 6 | Third grade glossy turned over by graduate (5) |
| GAMMA – MAG (glossy) [turned over] -> GAM, MA (graduate). | |
| 7 | Devious US uni, so in need of reform (7) |
| SINUOUS – (US uni so)* [in need of reform). | |
| 9 | Card held by bridge player in need of a partner? (6,5) |
| LONELY HEART – Double definition, the first a cryptic hint. I’m not sure where the “lonely” comes from without having e.g. “Single” at the start of the clue. | |
| 12 | Separate ends of shop illuminated (5,2) |
| SPLIT UP – [ends of] ShoP LIT UP (illuminated). | |
| 14 | Blue duo cavorting in capital of Wisconsin (6-1) |
| DOUBLE-U – (Blue duo)* [cavorting]. Capital as in the first letter of. | |
| 15 | I’m said to make you smile: the stuff of dreams? (6) |
| CHEESE – Definition and cryptic hint. I think it is referring to connection between eating cheese and bad dreams. “Serotonin can cause extremely vivid dreams at higher levels. Tryptophan is found in such foods as cheddar cheese, chicken, salmon, lamb, egg, flour, white rice, and milk. Cheddar cheese has the most amount of tryptophan.” | |
| 17 | Picture held up by popular umpire (5) |
| MURAL – Reverse hidden [held up in] in popuLAR UMpire -> MURAL. | |
| 19 | Sleep after swallowing tablet and lots of medicine? (5) |
| DOSES – DOSS (sleep) outside [swallowing] E (Ecstasy; tablet). | |
And here’s what I found in the grid…
[Thematic answers (click to open)]Apart from the English “DOUBLE-U”, we have, embedded in the answers, (at least) the following Greek letters (have I missed any?)
Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Epsilon, Eta, Theta, Mu, Nu, Pi, Psi and Tau
We also have the Hebrew Beth and He
Have I missed anything else?
I suspect this puzzle will not be that easy for slower solvers, with some tricky cryptics and answers that don’t come up every day – we shall see.
Edited at 2020-09-25 02:34 am (UTC)
I struggled to parse MURAL too!
Extraordinarily clever theme. I never had a chance; too focused on completing the puzzle to worry about missing something so subtle. If it’s not a pangram I stop looking!
Edited at 2020-09-25 06:22 am (UTC)
Edited at 2020-09-25 07:09 am (UTC)
Edited at 2020-09-25 07:30 am (UTC)
Like Kevin, I wondered about GS = Grammar School. It’s valid, but of the usual sources only Chambers has it, which is a bit unusual for a weekday puzzle, and certainly for a Quickie.
I still wouldn’t be surprised if it turns out there’s more going on here than has already been noted.
The NINA was far too clever for me – and I consider myself a bit of a linguist and philologist. I am in awe that John spotted it! There is one possible other letter you might want to add to the list: “eth” (in 16A Lambeth). Eth is the name of the letter Ð,ð which is used in Icelandic and Faroese, and which is pronounced as a soft voiced th (as in English the, not as in thin). Not I admit the most common of languages or therefore widely seen letters today, but it used to be much more so; it was a common letter in Anglo Saxon.
Thanks to Alfie and John for the blog, and I look forward to the weekend special.
Cedric
Edited at 2020-09-25 03:37 pm (UTC)
Thanks to John and I look forward to tackling your weekend QC
FOI AGES;LOI PILS where I sensibly stopped myself entering PALE just to stop the clock; a lesson learned this week.
Many good clues; I liked SPLIT UP but COD to GLADYS (I can see not everyone’s favourite). I had an aunt by that name and went to a GS.
Time 13:24. David
NHO SINUOUS in the sense of devious, or (amazingly) that W is written DOUBLE-U – I spent ages wondering what this obscure capital city could be! Nor did I know that brand names (PEPSI) were “allowed”. So I have been thoroughly educated today.
FOI ALPHABET (a poor clue, if I may say so, given that “Plath Bea” just seems to be nonsense), LOI & COD CHEESE (very clever), time 1.8K for an OK Day.
Many thanks Alfie and John; looking forward to the weekend puzzle!
Templar
Edited at 2020-09-25 10:49 am (UTC)
I also thought they weren’t allowed.
Dnf today.
COD GLADYS
Tks all
Diana
Edited at 2020-09-25 01:39 pm (UTC)
A good time to end the week. NHO GS for Grammar School, but it appears in enough Initialisms (MGS, RGS etc) to be fair.
Surely ‘Plath Bea’ is a pretty weak anagram of Alphabet, not a great clue to kick the whole thing off at 1 Across.
Sorry, I still don’t see the Nina.
LOI and COD CHEESE — I think the dreams thing is Apocryphal, although I had heard of it. Nice clue.
H
Didn’t spot the nina even though gamma was one of my early ones in, but I guess I was rushing and not enjoying. Thanks to blogger for pointing it out. I went looking then and most of them jumped out at me! Easy when you know the answer.
H
FOI: alphabet
LOI: cheese
COD: cheese but we really liked “lonely hearts” too
Thanks to John for the blog and for setting another WEQC – already looking forward to it
I couldn’t parse SONG OF SOLOMON and I was also surprised that PEPSI would be allowed. As for the other drink, I almost put in ‘slip’ before carefully re-reading the definition.
Amongst my favourites were AESOP, EASILY and SPLIT UP, with my COD going to DOUBLE-U.
Thanks to John for the blog and explanation of the nina – and thanks in advance for the weekend QC.
The main hold up was 13ac “Gladys” – primarily as I thought it was some school in the UK that doubled up as a female name.
NHO of 6dn “Gamma” for Third Grade and nearly got my letters muddled up for 2dn “Panoply”. Similarly, invented a new word for picture: “Ferni” for 17dn, until I realised I was writing complete rubbish.
Enjoyed 11ac “Long Ago” and 14dn “Double-U” (I also nearly put Double-O). Must remember “Lath” = Wooden Strip and that “Doss” doesn’t necessarily mean to muck about.
FOI – 1ac “Alphabet”
LOI – 13ac “Gladys”
COD – 15dn “Cheese” – The Liz Truss special.
Thanks as usual.
LOI was EASILY, as I had written in ??SELY in a hurry, taking into account the cathedral city.
ALPHABET put me right on that.
Never spot NINAs, but next time I see Alfie or Noel, I will try.
I thought 9 d was fair and got it quickly without crossers, it does say card (singular)
Tim
Scythe held me up. Tricky parsing of Centaurs too. As usual, I biffed a few I couldn’t parse properly. No problem with Gamma and luckily Gladys sprang to mind from the crossers.
Thanks all.
FOI – 1ac ALPHABET
LOI – 15dn CHEESE
COD – 3dn ABOLISHMENT for the surface
Edited at 2020-09-25 08:15 pm (UTC)
I was another “single heart” until I got the biblical clue.
It’s not often I need the blogger’s assistance on the QC, but thanks for parsing DOSES John. I don’t think I’ve ever seen ABOLISHMENT rather than abolition.
FOI AGES
LOI DOSES (with fingers crossed)
COD CHEESE (I love a cheese supper, and never have nightmares)
TIME 4:26
I must forewarn countryperson1 that one of the answers in the ‘biggy’is a smelling salts job!
Jordan’s Cheese Supper sounds rather good! But surely Phil you’ve heard of Wilberforce and The Abolishment of Slavery!? Unless it is still practiced in the northern states of the Danelaw.
FOI 10ac PEPSI
LOI 17dn MURAL
COD 13ac GLADYS today MORAG yesterday who’s next?
WOD 8ac SONG OF SOLOMON required reading whilst at school
Tim
I thought this was a brilliant puzzle even though it stretched me to 29 minutes (my target is 20 but I have been struggling to achieve that all week – so perhaps I’m just going backwards!). All the surfaces were remarkably smooth.
I was worried that I would fail completely at first as my FOI was 23a!!! LOI URBANE. If I have to choose a COD it would have to be 19a because it made me laugh but there were so many contenders. Of course 10a (ELEVENS) was amazing, once explained, but I didn’t manage to parse it myself. Thank you, John, for a wonderful weekend distraction! MM