Independent 9,229 / Phi

In customary fashion, Phi brings this week’s suite of mid-week puzzles to an end.

This was one of those puzzles where you see that there is one exceedingly long entry – 01/11/20 – that will prove crucial to how quickly (or otherwise) you solve the puzzle. Alas, I had no idea what Phi was looking for here, at least not until I had all 3 crossing letters of the last 5-letter word of this entry, whereupon a memory was triggered. To be honest, however, I had forgotten that this vaguely familiar sentence was actually the title of a musical. Inevitably, once in the grid, this long entry provided a great deal of help with solving the remaining clues.

In the end, I fathomed everything out unaided bar 13, where a search of Chambers revealed only one possibility and the penny dropped about the two meanings of “flog”. This was definitely one of those clues that I would have loved to have solved without help.

In addition to 13, today’s other favourite clues were the extended definitions at 4 and 12; and in particular 17, for its inclusion of so much Marvel-related material in the wordplay.

True to form, I have spotted no particular theme today, but perhaps other solvers have?

(…) indicates an anagram; definitions are italicised; // separates definitions in multiple-definition clues

Across    
     
01/11/20 A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM Musical opener for warm-up man at conference?

Cryptically, a participant at a conference (“forum”) might open a conversation with “a funny thing happened …”; the reference is to the 1962 musical by Stephen Sondheim

     
07 LAV Bog in space between hills mostly retreating

VAL<e> (=space between hills; “mostly” means last letter dropped); “retreating” indicates reversal; colloquially, a bog is a lav(atory), loo

     
09 TWAIN Endless yarn interrupted by a US storyteller

A in TWIN<e> (=yard, cord; “endless” means last letter dropped); the reference is to American writer and humourist Mark Twain (1835-1910)

     
10 MUTTERING Indistinctly mentioning money and the production of counterfeit money

M (=money) + UTTERING (=production of counterfeit money, in law)

     
14 AMMONIA Military supplies rejected a popular pungent gas

AMMO (=military supplies, i.e. ammunition) + NIA (A + IN (=popular); “rejected” indicates reversal)

     
15 ILLICIT Criminal’s heart skipping a beat, ultimately, in pursuit of Channel Islands criminal

<v>ILL<a>I<n> (=criminal; “heart” means first and last letters are dropped; “skipping a” means letter “a” is dropped) + CI (=Channel Islands) + <bea>T (“ultimately” means last letter dropped)

     
16 ENDEMIC Stop me backing one Conservative over all the district

END (=stop, as verb or noun) + EM (ME; “backing” indicates reversal) + I (=one) + C (=Conservative)

     
18 KIMONOS I’m working in Greek island in traditional costumes

[I’M + ON (=working)] in KOS (=Greek island)

     
22 MARINETTI Italian futurist represented time in art

*(TIME IN ART); “represented” is anagram indicator; the reference is to Italian poet and editor Filippo Tomasso Marinetti, founder of the Futurist movement

     
24 HANDY Convenient limits to heresy

“H” AND “Y” are the first and last letters of “heresy”, hence its ‘limits”

     
25 NAP Sleep is // a good tip

Double definition: a NAP is a (short) “sleep” AND “a good (racing) tip”

     
26 ROLLER-SKATE Smart car towing fish is a form of wheeled transport

ROLLER (=smart car, i.e. Rolls-Royce) + SKATE (=fish)

     
Down    
     
01 ARTY Unusually expressive person losing head

<p>ARTY (=person, one involved in); “losing head” means first letter dropped

     
02 UNASHAMEDLY Delays human trafficking? Absolutely

*(DELAYS HUMAN); “trafficking” is anagram indicator

     
03 NINE-PIN Sporting item suggesting square leg?

NINE (=square, i.e. 3 x 3) + PIN (=leg, i.e. body part); a nine-pin is a bottle-shaped skittle

     
04 TEMPERANCE HOTEL “Open the claret, me? Not so” – its landlord might say?

*(OPEN THE CLARET ME); “not so” is anagram indicator; this statement could well have been uttered by the landlord of a temperance hotel, where no alcohol is served

     
05 IN THE NICK OF TIME Jailed? Old fellow gets prison sentence with moments to spare

IN THE NICK (=jailed) + O (=old) + F (=fellow) + TIME (=prison sentence)

     
06 GREY OWL Response from dog after cornering the old soaring bird

EY (YE=the old, i.e. an old word for the); “soaring” indicates vertical reversal) in GROWL (=response from dog); the grey owl is the tawny owl

     
07 LEI Floral tribute certain to be overlooked by the rest

LEI<sure> (=rest, free time); “certain (=sure) to be omitted” means the letters “sure” are dropped); a lei is a Hawaiian floral wreath

     
08 VIGNETTIST Sketch-writer setting it unexpectedly below Vatican City

V (=Vatican City, in IVR) + *(SETTING IT); “unexpectedly” is anagram indicator

     
12 TECHNOMANIA Wasted a month with Eniac – showing early form of this?

*(A MONTH + ENIAC); “wasted” is anagram indicator; Eniac is an early American electronic computer, an obsession with which would be an early form of technomania

     
13 SALESWOMAN A flogger, though not necessarily a dominatrix

Cryptically, a flogger here is someone flogging, i.e. selling, something, rather than one administering a spanking in SM!!

     
17 MJÖLNIR Justice League conflated with Iron Man’s première? One of Marvel’s weapons

*(JL (=Justice League) + IRON + M<an> (“première” means first letter only)); “conflated” is anagram indicator; Mjölnir is Thor’s enchanted hammer in mythology, as featured in the Marvel comics/films

     
19 MARCHES Demonstrates support during endless disorder

ARCH (=support, in architecture) in MES<s> (=disorder; “endless” means last letter dropped)

     
21 BYTE Time to contribute to extra quantity of information

T (=time) in BYE (=extra, in cricket)

     
23 REP Theatre people seen around this?

Hidden (“seen around”) in “theatRE People”; rep is repertory theatre

     

 

5 comments on “Independent 9,229 / Phi”

  1. Yes, this was very dependent on a few long clues. Sadly my experience was the reverse of RatkojaRiku’s, in that for me they were all first-pass write-ins, drastically shortening my Friday Solving Experience. After that, more or less a mopping-up operation, though two unknowns (MARINETTI, which I got unaided, and MJOLNIR, which I didn’t) held me up at the end.
    It’s been a week of contrasts, this one at the easier end of the spectrum for me, but all enjoyable. Thanks to RR & Phi.

  2. Thanks Phi and RatkojaRiku.

    I found this hard going, Marinetti and MJOLNIR were unknown. I particularly liked HANDY, LEI and MARCHES.

    “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Thor’s Hammer” is a short film made by Marvel Studios, Marvel One-Shots, just a coincidence?

  3. Funnily enough, I was in the Roman forum earlier this week, and in St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican.

    For the record, the Justice League (of America) is a DC group of superheroes, not Marvel. (I was a great fan of DC comics in the early sixties.)

  4. Not that I know much about these sorts of things but the DC/Marvel clash in MJOLNIR was intended, so I’m glad someone noticed.

    Otherwise I can note that the puzzle emerged simply from noticing that HAPPENED ON THE and WAY TO THE FORUM were the same length and building a grid around a symmetrical placement thereof that also allowed me to squeeze in A FUNNY THING.

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