Azed 2319

A standard plain puzzle from Azed today.

 

 

 

I made steady progress through this one with the usual help from Chambers dictionary.

As usual I learnt an obscure meaning of an everyday word .  At 1 across, I have probably come across DRESS meaning treat before but I had to check it.

Words I hadn’t come across before included CARLOT (9 across) although the clue couldn’t lead to anything else, CAYUSE (15 across) and SOTADIC (4 down).  There were others.

I thought the cluing was very fair.

Across
No. Clue Wordplay Entry

1

 

Diplomat from Belgium entering a crowd, a treat (12)

 

(B [International Vehicle registration for Belgium] contained in [entering] [A + MASS {crowd}]) + A + DRESS (treat)

A M (B) ASS A DRESS

AMBASSADRESS (diplomat)

 

10

 

Place to buy a used Pontiac for old peasant? (6)

 

CAR (e.g. a Pontiac [American CAR]) + LOT (A plot of ground allotted or assigned to any person or purpose, e.g. in America especially, for selling CARs)

 

CARLOT (archaic [old] term for churl, rustic or peasant)

 

12

 

Head for prickles among garden flowers?  This may prevent accidents (5)

P (first letter of [head for] PRICKLES) contained in (among) ROSA (the rose genus; garden flowers)

ROS (P) A

ROSPA (ROyal Society for the Prevention of Accidents)

 

13

 

Bright star – sailor in North Sea given guidance (7)

 

TAR (sailor) contained in (in) (an anagram of [given guidance] N [North] and SEA)

AN (TAR) ES*

ANTARES (first-magnitude red star, the brightest in the Scorpius constellation)

 

14

 

Wine cases in the process of fermentation (6)

 

CA (cases) contained in (in) MUST (process of fermentation)

MUS (CA) T

MUSCAT (MUSCATel wine)

 

15

 

Small pony, advantage with year corralled (6)

 

CAUSE (advantage) containing (with … corralled) Y (year)

CA (Y) USE

CAYUSE (small Native American pony)

 

16

 

Bore object, removing rot (4)

 

PROTEST (object) excluding (removing) ROT

 

PEST (troublesome person, e.g. a bore)

 

17

 

Passage from a poem of long ago (4)

 

A + DIT (archaic [of long ago] word for poem)

 

ADIT (opening or passage, especially into a mine)

 

20

 

Regular feature of route march giving legionary firmness of muscle? (9)

 

MILES (informal word for very much [legionary]) + TONE (firmness of muscles)

 

MILESTONE (regular feature of a route)

 

22

 

What Spartans never did as it clashed with edict (9)

 

Anagram of (clashed) AS IT and EDICT

ATTICISED*

ATTICISED (side with the Athenians, something the Spartans never did.  The Spartans and the Athenians were great rivals))

25

 

Part of Berber merlon? (4)

 

BERM (hidden word in (part of) BERBER MERLON

 

BERM (wall of sand built as a defence in desert warfare; a MERLON is the  part of a parapet between embrasures. which could be a made of sand in BERBER fortresses)

 

27

 

Lines of the French playing without us (4)

 

VERSUS (against; playing) excluding (without) US

 

VERS (French word for verse; poetry; lines)

 

29

 

Musical drama from a region that includes Italy (6)

 

A + (ZONE [region]) containing [includes] I [international vehicle registration for Italy])

A Z (I) ONE

AZIONE (composition performed as a drama.; musical drama)

 

31

 

Former line introducing discussion put back in paper? (6)

 

REW (Spenserian [old; former] word for row [line]) + RAP (discussion)

 

REWRAP (put back in paper)

 

32

 

Set pane that’s broken, leaden (7)

 

Anagram of (that’s broken) SET PANE

PESANTE*

PESANTE (musical term meaning heavy; leaden)

 

33

 

Yankee ships on river displaying lichen (7)

 

USN (United States Navy; Yankee ships) + EA (dialect word for river)

 

USNEA (any member of the USNEA genus of lichens)

 

34

 

Lid: turn it, then fret with spillage (6)

 

IT reversed (turn) + an anagram of (with spillage) FRET

TI< TFER*

TITFER (tit for tat, Cockney rhyming slang for a hat; lid)

 

35

 

Chalet’s cluttered with épées – it entails clearing obstacles (12)

 

Anagram of (cluttered) CHALET’S and [with] ÉPÉES

STEEPLECHASE*

STEEPLECHASE (race with obstacles to be jumped)

 

Down

2

 

Small model that French put in sort of mask (8)

 

QUE (French for that) contained in (put in) MATTE (sort of mask used to block out areas of the image, allowing a different image to be superimposed)

MA (QUE) TTE

MAQUETTE (small model of something to be made on a larger scale)

 

3

 

Old-fashioned club, rather loud (6)

 

BRASSY (variant spelling of BRASSIE [old-fashioned golf club])

 

BRASSY (showy, loud) double definition

 

4

 

Dancing at disco, lascivious (7)

 

Anagram of (dancing) AT DISCO

SOTADIC*

SOTADIC (relating to SOTADES, a lascivious and scurrilous Greek poet (approx 276BC), or his writings, or his metre)

 

5

 

Speak words in play with special majesty (11)

 

STATE (speak) + LINES (words in a play) + S (special)

 

STATELINESS (majesty)

 

6

 

Fantasy tot, packed with energy (5)

 

DRAM (tot [of whisky]) containing (packed with) E (energy)

DR (E) AM

DREAM (fantasy)

 

7

 

Key ivy – it’s standard in Cape Verde (6)

 

ESC (escape key on a keyboard) + UDO (Japanese species of Aralia [genus of the ivy family] with edible shoots)

 

ESCUDO (standard monetary unit of the Cape Verde islands)

 

8

 

Bath etc reduced muscular contraction (4)

 

SPASM (muscular contraction) excluding the final letter (reduced) M

 

SPAS (heated baths or pools; resorts offering steam baths and other health treatments; bath etc )

 

9 A Scots child having a beach dip as a tonic? (7, 2 words)

(A + GET [variant spelling of GEIT [Scot’s word for child]) contained in (having a … dip) SEA  A beach dip can be defined as going in the SEA)

S (A GE T) EA

SAGE TEA (infusion of sage leaves, used domestically as a tonic)

10

 

Marks accepted by head in school (4)

 

M (marks [former German currency]) contained in (accepted by) CAP (head)

CA (M) P

CAMP (training school)

 

11

 

Arrange gold box price (11)

 

OR (gold) + CHEST (box) + RATE (price)

 

ORCHESTRATE (arrange)

 

18

 

Vipers, angriest when disturbed (8)

 

Anagram of (when disturbed) ANGRIEST

INGRATES*

INGRATES (ungrateful people; vipers)

 

19

 

Check rear end for bloodsuckers (7)

 

TAB (check; both TAB and check used more often in America than in Britain) + ANUS (part of the rear-end of the body)

 

TABANUS (gadfly genus; bloodsuckers)

 

21

 

Moony since maddened with extremes of love (7)

 

Anagram of (maddened) SINCE and LE (first and last letters [extremes] of LOVE)

SELENIC*

SELENIC (relating to the moon; moony)

 

23

 

Bishop vacates centre of his stall in Trinity (6)

 

TRIBUNE (bishop’s stall or throne) excluding (vacates) B (bishop)

 

TRIUNE (a trinity in unity)

 

24

 

Whistle-blower interrupts meal not properly prepared (6)

 

REF (referee; whistleblower) contained in (interrupting) TEA (meal)

TE (REF) A

TEREFA (forbidden as food, not kosher; not properly prepared)

MEAL could be doing double duty in this clue

26

 

Pinch, a little bit of salt one put in mint (5)

 

A (one) contained in (put in) SNEP (catmint)

SNE (A) P

SNEAP (nip, pinch)

 

28

 

What penetrates flank where Royalists and Puritans meet? (4)

 

SPUR (hidden word [where … meet] in ROYALISTS PURITANS [where the two words meet, without the intervening and])

 

SPUR (hard sharp projection that penetrates the flank of a horse)

 

30

 

Leader of trek says climbing provides relish (4)

 

(T [first letter of {leader of} TREK] + SEZ [says]) all reversed (climbing; down clue)

ZEST<

ZEST (relish)

 

 

4 comments on “Azed 2319”

  1. Thankfully on the easier side for Azed after last week’s mammoth task. I had to check the wordplay in a few I didn’t fully understand at the end, but the rest was a gentle stroll through the pages of Chambers.

  2. Norman @ 3

    You could well be right! I was looking at CAP as ‘top’ and there was an oblique reference to school in the definition of CAMP. As the A was an unchecked letter, I just moved on.

    Your suggestion seems to be much more rigorous than mine.

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