Financial Times no.14,452 by Bradman

[If you’re attending York S&B please see comments 32&33] - here

This should have been a lovely puzzle to work through over a cup of coffee in the autumn sunshine… but as the past week has scrambled my brain and left my faculties in disarray, it was more of a struggle than it ought to have been. A very nice puzzle, as far as I can make out – smart clueing, some very sly misdirection and a few words that were new to me. Thank-you, Bradman.

ACROSS

9. HURRICANE  Anagram of raunchier

10. PILEI  Pile [heap] + i [one]

11. VENISON  Ven [Venerable, archdeacon] + is on – not sure where ‘menu’ comes into it

12. TAX-FREE  A + X [cross] + F [female] within tree [elder, perhaps]

13. LEI  Levi [priest] minus v [very]

14. PNEUMOCOCCI  CC [cold, repeatedly] within anagram of i come upon

17. CARET  Care [worry] + t [time]

18. PAN  P(age) + an [indefinite article]

19. ORCAS  (F)or cas(h)

21. LO AND BEHOLD  Anagram of hello bad don

23. RIB  Double definition, alluding to the creation of Eve

25. BUGLOSS  Double definition

27. GROWLED  Grow [get more] + led [took in hand]

28. TONNE  To [before the hour] + nine minus i [one]

29. VOLTE-FACE  Anagram of vocal feet

DOWN

1. SHOVEL  (Labour)s + hovel [shed]

2. FRONTIER  F [female] + ron [man’s name] + tier [row]

3. DISSIPATED  is + sip [drink] + ate [consumed] within DD [Doctor of Divinity, theologian]

4. LAWN  Double definition

5. PENTIMENTO  Pen [writer] + time [period] + NT [New Testament, collection of books] + o [old]

6. APEX  Ape [primate] + x [cross]

7. CLERIC  C [Conservative] + L [Liberal] + eric [fine]

8. TIBERIUS  Anagram of is brute I

15. EXPRESSIVE  Ex [no longer] + press [newspapers] + I’ve [this writer’s]

16. CLOUD COVER  Cryptic definition

17. CELIBATE  Eli [priest] + bat [nasty old woman] within CE [Church (of England)]

20. CARTLOAD  Anagram of actor lad

22. ARGENT  (S)argent [American artist]

24. BADGER  Bad [not good] + Germany [country] minus many

26. OVER  (D)over [port]

27. GALL  Sounds like Gaul [France as it was]

 

2 comments on “Financial Times no.14,452 by Bradman”

  1. Thanks Bradman for an enjoyable puzzle and Ringo for the blog. I too found myself taking longer than usual over this puzzle before seeing answers that were obvious once I had got them. Bradman on a Thursday – should we expect something special tomorrow related to the date?

    11ac: I think “on the menu” is cluing “on”, although it seems a bit strange to clue a word by a phrase that includes that word.

  2. Thanks B and R. I also found this tricky. Eric was new to me. Some quite obscure stuff but v. sound clueing, as usual.

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