It’s Wednesday and we are pleased that we have a classic Dac to solve and blog. We hope he is continuing to make a good recovery.
There are a number of French references and perhaps more than the usual cryptic definitions – Joyce enjoyed 11ac and 19ac.
ACROSS | ||
1 | Queen’s travelling by this French train (8) | |
SEQUENCE | An anagram of QUEEN’S and CE (French for ‘this’) | |
5 | Plot developments of Oliver? (6) | |
TWISTS | A play on the character Oliver Twist | |
10 | Indian duck served with herb (5) | |
OSAGE | O (duck) SAGE (herb) | |
11 | Bet it’s what Cambridge boat thief will do? (4,1,4) | |
TAKE A PUNT | A play on the fact that a boat thief in Cambridge may steal a punt | |
12 | Mum and I, extremely shaky (7) | |
SHIVERY | SH (mum) I VERY (extremely) | |
13 | Requirement for endorsement on passport not revealing a blood group (7) | |
PROVISO | PRO (for) VIS |
|
14 | Leaders of regiment are instigating dangerous assault (4) | |
RAID | First letters or ‘leaders’ of Regiment Are Instigating Dangerous | |
15 | Once hard to bend into shape (10) | |
OCTAHEDRON | An anagram of ONCE HARD TO (anagrind is ‘bend’) | |
19 | Left and did some recording studio work (4,6) | |
MADE TRACKS | A play on what takes place in a recording studio | |
20 | Extract from Thackeray, a dull writer (4) | |
HACK | Hidden in the clue tHACKeray | |
23 | Exhausted artist had meal outside (7) | |
DRAINED | RA (artist) with DINED (had meal) around the outside | |
25 | One travelling to ancient city is rapt in the end (7) | |
TOURIST | TO UR (Ancient city) IS T (last letter or ‘end’ of rapt) | |
26 | Chance to escape, taking in that French resort in the Pas-de-Calais (2,7) | |
LE TOUQUET | LET OUT (chance to escape) taking in QUE (French for ‘that’) | |
27 | Couple ultimately missing church wedding (5) | |
MATCH | MAT |
|
28 | European‘s career has impressed heads of News International (6) | |
DANISH | DASH (career) around NI (first letters or ‘heads’ of News International) | |
29 | Blair, say, taken in by a fellow such as Bush? (8) | |
AMERICAN | ERIC (As in Eric Blair, better known as George Orwell) taken in by A MAN (fellow) | |
DOWN | ||
1 | Southern company, one employing northerner (7) | |
SCOUSER | S (Southern) CO (company) USER (one employing) | |
2 | Got diploma modified? (9) | |
QUALIFIED | Double definition | |
3 | City with old English name shortened (6) | |
EXETER | EX (old) E (English) TER |
|
4 | Tom is so spiteful (5) | |
CATTY | Cryptic defintion | |
6 | Carrying arms we hide at last in a stretch of water (8) | |
WEAPONED | WE + E (last letter of hide or ‘at last’) in A POND (stretch of water) | |
7 | Arab initially seeks 16’s heart (5) | |
SAUDI | S (first letter of seeks or ‘initially’) AUDI (found in the centre or ‘heart’ of 16ac) | |
8 | Unpromising start for a tennis player, note (3,4) | |
SET DOWN | A play on the fact that if a tennis player was a set down it might not be a promising start to a match | |
9 | Captain needs to lift big fish (8) | |
SKIPJACK | SKIP (captain) JACK (to lift) | |
16 | Emperor placing large car in protection of coppers? (8) | |
CLAUDIUS | L (large) AUDI(car) inside CUS (coppers) | |
17 | Plastic article is practical (9) | |
REALISTIC | An anagram of ARTICLE IS (anagrind is ‘plastic’) | |
18 | Weapons hurt 26 individuals? (4,4) | |
STUN GUNS | STUNG (hurt) UNS (individual could be UN in Le Touquet) | |
19 | Beast of burden carries two daughters, with another trailing in confusion (7) | |
MUDDLED | MULE (beast of burden) around DD (two daughters) + D (daugher) | |
21 | Room in the nick refurbished (7) | |
KITCHEN | An anagram of THE NICK ( anagrind is ‘refurbished’) | |
22 | Holiday season problem near sea in 26 (6) | |
SUMMER | SUM (problem) MER (sea in French) | |
24 | Name of fellow heading out of Chinese city (5) | |
ANTON | ||
25 | Object of spiritual significance to carry before mass? (5) | |
TOTEM | TOTE (to carry) M (mass) | |
Nice occasionally to have one that gets a rhythm going. I’m not a fast solver, so my twenty-something minutes for this would pretty much a PB.
I did like 13a (PROVISO) for natural surface and a neat substitution.
Thanks to Dac and to Bert & Joyce.
Still can’t get anywhere with having the setter’s name shown in the Daily.
Grant @1.
Not ideal but a workaround is to visit the puzzle on the website, where the setter is listed, before returning to the app for solving.
http://puzzles.independent.co.uk/games/cryptic-crossword-independent/#!201605
Enjoyable solve today, thanks as ever to setter and bloggers.
Grant @ 1 – If you’re an idevice user, I get along pretty well with the paid app from
http://standalone.com/iphone/crosswords/
Which includes the setter’s name with each crossword.
The developer has even been responsive to some bugettes with the Indy crossword which is always nice to see.
Great crossword and blog as usual many thanks to both.
Found this a bit trickier than your normal Dac, but that’s probably just me.
I think that 4dn is more of a cd cum dd than a dd; and I’m not entirely convinced by STUN GUNS, since I’m struggling to understand how UNS can be French ‘individuals’ except in a very whimsical way.
Thanks all three, and I’ll add my best wishes for a speedy recovery to the setter.
As said, some amusing definitions and wordplay, but for me the fastest solve of all time.
Thanks to Dac and Bertandjoyce.
Yes, fine Dac puzzle as ever. Setter’s name always available to see (by me anyway) on the Indy crossword link (available free to all).
Yes, K’s D at #4, that’s whimsical, I’d say, conveyed by the qm at end of clue. Thanks B&J for blog.
18d, there is the film “Les Uns et les Autres”, a common expression in French…
All very straightforward apart from OSAGE – for some reason I had a mental block both about Indians (American or otherwise) and about herbs.
Thanks and good wishes to Dac; hope your recovery continues and you’re neither 22 nor 12. Thanks, too, to B&J.
Thanks to Geebs & Barking for their suggestions. I’ve tried them both/all and they’re unsatisfactory. The sites are shouty &/or advert-ridden and the fact is I’m a bit ticked-off with the Indy on-line, having paid for a year of it. This is not the forum for that discussion (click away now if you’re not bothered) & I’ll be posting & emailing my moans elsewhere, but briefly a newspaper is more than its news & editorial. The X-words, the telly-&-radio schedules the league-tables & fixtures (sorry, Bert & Joyce) are all part of it. Of course they’re available elsewhere but that’s not the point. I’ll stop now before this turns into a rant.
Grant @9.
Totally agree. And it’s compounded by the disappearance of some of the best writers and reporters from the print era. I have the strong suspicion the move to online was also a convenient time to replace experience with interns.
What forum are you posting your concerns in ?
G.
I like a Dac, this was no exception, thanks to thee blogger[s] and all the very best to the setter.
I love Dac’s puzzles, he is one of the few setters whose wavelengths I feel at home on. No problem with 26, having been there 14 years running with 47 pupils – I was a French teacher too!