Azed No. 2,780

It’s the first Sunday of the month, so it’s Azed’s turn to provide our weekly barred puzzle.

Lots of anagrams and part-anagrams made this a fairly easy solve, although there were several unfamiliar terms. There were also quite a few Scottish usages, not all of which were indicated. There’s just one clue I can’t completely parse, at 21 down, but no doubt others will be able to explain it.

Thanks to Azed.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 HUFF-CAP
Stirred chaff up, like old liquor (7)
*(CHAFF UP). A nice easy anagram to start with, although the answer is an unfamiliar word.
7 PENT
A lean-to with five columns in front, a style disregarded (4)
PENT(astyle) (having five columns in front).
10 LOAN-HOLDER
Place for milkmaid with husband, not so recent – one holds security (10)
LOAN (a Scottish term, not indicated as such, for a milking-place) H(usband) OLDER.
11 SNUCK
Number in drain was cringing (5)
N(umber) in suck (drain).
12 ARMOIRE
Branch I got in tangle making large wardrobe (7)
ARM (branch) I in ORE (a tangle).
14 STERIGMA
Stalk to check, one circling equipment (8)
RIG (equipment) inside STEM (check) A.
15 FAND
The old proceed, fluttered by the sound of it (4)
Sounds like “fanned”.
18 STENO
Secretary reproduced notes (5)
*NOTES.
20 GYROIDAL
Spun gold, airy and spiral (8)
*(GOLD AIRY).
22 CHELIPED
Bit of crab? That was useful round island (8)
C(rab) I(sland) inside HELPED. The initial C seems to be doing double duty as both part of the definition and part of the wordplay.
24 REBUS
Problem to do with transport (5)
A simple charade.
26 SYCE
Groom, bashful husband leaving church (4)
S(h)Y, CE (Church of England).
27 BROMINES
Chemicals gypsy found in hop stems (8)
ROM (Romany man, or gypsy) in BINES (hop stems).
29 TERROIR
Distinctive character of wine I fed to rogue (7)
I in TERROR (a rogue).
30 SCENA
Operatic episode presented by clubs in Indian army (5)
C(lubs) inside SENA (in India, an army).
31 CALUMNIOUS
A cousin messed around chimney causing injury? (10)
LUM (chimney) inside *(A COUSIN).
32 HAEM
Blood pigment creating energy in meat (4)
E(nergy) inside HAM.
33 HANDSET
Day in Athens, wandering remote (7)
D(ay) inside *ATHENS.
DOWN
1 HOSS
Cavalry essential? Armies short of tons (4)
HOS(t)S (armies).
2 UINTATHERE
Huge old fossil in Spanish country house, headless, look yonder (10)
(q)UINTA (Spanish country house) THERE.
3 FLUENCE
Uncle trained in further education displaying volubility (7)
*UNCLE inside FE (Further Education).
4 CAKING
Forming packed mass about royal on board? (6)
CA (circa, about) KING (chess piece).
5 ANAGLYPH
Gay plan formed with hearts – it consists of two prints (8)
*(GAY PLAN) H(earts).
6 NOMA
Affliction of starving kids – lack of parent (4)
NO MA.
7 PLOTTIES
Mulled wines scald with matches (8)
PLOT – Another unindicated Scottish (or N England) term for scald, TIES (matches).
8 EDILE
Old magistrate to cut off, rising (5)
ELIDE (rev).
9 TREMOLO
Quivering, having drunk Merlot with duck (7)
*MERLOT + O (duck, or a score of nought for a batsman).
13 RENASCENCE
Earn renewed activity around century, being born anew (10)
*EARN, C(entury) inside SCENE (activity).
16 DELUBRUM
Font, sort of barrel with tarnished blue within (8)
*BLUE inside DRUM (barrel). This is the sort of font you find in a church, not a typeface.
17 PRETORIA
Soak in foreign river and atmosphere climbing in SA city (8)
RET (soak) in PO (Italian river), AIR (atmosphere) (rev).
19 SCRITCH
Comment in school – owlish observation? (7)
CRIT(icism, comment) inside SCH(ool).
21 DRYNESS
Once almost got up in clothes displaying sobriety (7)
YN inside DRESS (clothes). I can’t explain how YN equates to “almost got up”. Note the similarity of construction to the clue at 3 down.
23 DAMSON
Fruit like this is bottled in what has little value (6)
SO (like this) inside DAMN (of little value).
25 BIRLE
Pour out Scotch, recipe in aid to digestion (5)
R(ecipe) inside BILE (aid to digestion).
27 BOMA
A crowd turning up in fenced enclosure (4)
A MOB (rev).
28 SAUT
What’s in Jock’s cellar? 50% sweet wine (4)
SAUT(ernes) (a sweet wine). Cellar in the clue refers to a salt cellar.

2 comments on “Azed No. 2,780”

  1. Matthew

    I agree that 1a is an easy anagram that I entered early on but, since I was trying to fill as much as I could without using Chambers and I didn’t know HUFF-CAP was really a word, I started to doubt it was correct when 2d heeded to start U_NT. I eventually found 2d in Chambers and I think I have seen it before and probably UINTAITE also, so I probably should have remembered there was a word that starts like that.

    I addition to the lack of indication of Scottish terms, I expected SNUCK to be indicated as American (but Chambers also says it can informal) and when I checked in Chambers I noticed that FLUENCE is given as Miltonian.

    I thought it was customary to not repeat words from the answer in the definition, so I didn’t think ‘one holds security’ was a good definition for LOAD-HOLDER, but I suppose I could charitably see it as a double bluff. I’ve sometimes wasted time trying to think of a synonym for a word in part of a wordplay before realising that the literal word is what is needed, eg ‘style’ in 7a.

    In 22a, I though ‘That‘ was intended to refer to ‘Bit of crab’, so the clue means ‘Bit of crab? Bit of crab was useful round island’ and then there is no double duty.

    For 21d, NY is an obsolete spelling on NIGH, so it once meant almost, and got up indicates reversal.

    In 28d, I assume the spelling Sauterne is intended so that SAUT uses half of its letters.

    Thanks, bridgesong and Azed.


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