Fifteensquared

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Archive for January 3rd, 2007

Independent 6307/Dac

Posted by Colin Blackburn on 3rd January 2007

Colin Blackburn.

When I began this puzzle I expected a fairly easy ride as usual with Dac. In the end this puzzle took me way too long mainly due to the time spent looking at one or two clues. I felt that these two clues were unfair for a daily cryptic with no searchable dictionary to hand, though the majority of the clues were fair and relatively easy.

Across
9 LOLLOP — LOLL+OP — lollop is a nice word meaning bound, as in jump. The definition was nicely hidden by the surface.
10 HILARITY — HILAR(IT)Y — Hilary is both a male and female name.
11 BRASSERIE — BRASS(ER)IE — a brassie is a golf club, not something I knew but with a couple of checking letters it was a good guess.
14 COMPROMISED — double definition.
18 LINCOLNS INN — LINCOLN’S+INN — inn = local, Lincoln’s Inn is one of the four Inns of Court in London. I can’t work out if it should or shouldn’t have an apostrophe. Most sources quote the name with while the Lincolns Inn website quotes it without.
21 READY — READ+Y — again, the definition, set, is nicely concealed in the surface reading.
22 THEME SONG — (GENT’S HOME)* — number = a song.
24 TURN AWAY — “Turner way” — a terrible pun!
26 MUSTERED — “mustard” — mustard is a brassica, a member of the cabbage family.
Down
1 HALFBACK — double definition — a halfback is a football (soccer) position, to back is to put money on (bet).
2 MALLARME — “mal arme” — the first of my problem clues. The poet is certainly not known to me and the French is a struggle after the “mal”, in fact I’ve probably misquoted it. If Mallarme was the only reasonable entry then a simpler charade clue would have been much more satisfactory.
3 GOONS — GO ON+S
5 OLIVER STONE — OLIVER’S TONE — with the O already in this fell into place straight away.
7 ALISON — (m)ALISON — the second of my problem clues. I had A-I-O- and just stared at the grid for ages. When I finally plumped for Alison = woman as the only reasonable fit it then dawned on me that unmarried implied no M. I then found malison, an archaic and poetic word for a curse. I’d never heard of malison (the opposite of benison) and felt that it was a little unfair to use it as part of a less than straighforward charade.
15 RELAY RACE — RELAY+RACE — fairly clear once I’d stopped forcing RALLY RACE to become the answer!
16 MINORCAN — MINOR+CAN — young offender’s institution got me for a while.
23 ESHER — ES(c)HER — Esher is an English Town, though I didn’t realise Escher was a Dutch artist. Escher drew topologically interesting worlds and amazing tessellations.

Posted in Independent | 3 Comments »

Guardian 23,964/Araucaria - Monkeys and ponies?

Posted by loonapick on 3rd January 2007

loonapick.

Araucaria, love him or loathe him, rarely fails to produce an enjoyable puzzle to solve and you always learn something new to boot.

This is typical fare - there aren’t many examples that I could see which were “unfair” (possibly 19dn), and the more diffcult words were guessable via the wordplay.  But I think 1dn is simply wrong.

You do need to know a bit about English geography and history, as some of the clues are linked to 21ac and 27dn.

ACROSS

8 - EDWIN - ED(W)IN - Edin referring to Edinburgh; alhough I haven’t ever seen Edin on it’s own, I think the clue is probably fair.

11 - LINGUAL - (a gull in)*; a nounal anagram indicator, which some solvers don’t like.  Personally, I think it’s acceptable.

12 - WEDMORE - scene of a treaty in 878 between Alfred the Great and Guthrum, where Guthrum became Alfred’s adopted son.

13 - NASIK - hidden in “religioN AS I Know”; Nasik, aka Nashik, is a city in India.

17 - PETER PAUL - (perpetual)*; great clue which threw me at first, because I quickly put in STILL LIFE.

25 - ACTIVATE - ACT IV + (tea)*; not sure what “Shakespearean” brings to the party.

26 - DENEB - DENE(=valley) + B(born); the brightest star in the Cygnus constellation.

27 - ALFRED THE GREAT - (Father Ted regal)* the culinary reference relates to the story that he burnt a batch of cakes while hiding out on a peasant’s home.

DOWN

1 - SHETLAND PONY - SHE-T-L-AND-PONY where T=”model”.  I think the setter has got a bit mixed up with his slang terms for money.  As far as I know there are 20 ponies in a monkey, not the other way round, as the clue would indicate (pony = £25, monkey = £500).

2 - ROWAN - RO(W)AN; see 19dn

3 - TENDULKAR - TEND-U(L)K-A-R; refers to Indian batsman, Sachin Tendulkar.

16,10 - LET THE DOG SEE THE RABBIT - LET(T)HE-DO-G(SEETHE)RAB-BIT

14 - SATIRICAL - SAT 1-RI-CAL where RI=Rhode Island and CAL=California

19 - LAMBETH - I can see the links to walk, Rowan and Canterbury, since Lambeth Palace is the official residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury, currently Rowan Williams, and The Lambeth Walk is a song, but there’s no wordplay, just a series of links (am I being too pedantic?)

22 - OSIER - ‘osier indicating “hosier”.  When you see ‘e in a clue, that often indicates that you need a word from which you can drop the letter “h”.

Posted in Guardian | 8 Comments »