Financial Times 15,550 by ARMONIE

Very brisk solve today, the surfaces all unforced and faultless.

Mere dust beneath the chariot wheels of most solvers this morning, I should think, but you do have to admire how seamlessly virtually every clue seems  to read in this one. Thanks to Armonie.

completed grid
Across
1 STENCH The smell of Sunday’s fish (6)
  S[unday’s] TENCH (‘fish’).
4 STYMIE Block major road going through 12 (6)
  M1 (‘major road’) included in STYE (solution to 12 across).
8 RECOUNT Describe what may happen when the voting is close (7)
  Double definition.
9 MIMICRY Burlesque makes Bohemian girl howl (7)
  MIMI (‘Bohemian girl’, doomed heroine of Puccini’s La Boheme) + CRY (‘howl’).
11 ILLITERATE Dunce’s unfortunate to say it again (10)
  ILL (‘unfortunate’, as in ‘ill wind’) + ITERATE (‘say it again’).
12 STYE We hear beastly home is an eyesore (4)
  Homophone (‘we hear’) of ‘sty’ (‘beastly home’).
13 GREED Voracity is permitted, first off (5)
  aGREED (‘permitted’), first letter deleted.
14 DEBONAIR Gracious girl coming out and being broadcast (8)
  DEB[utante], (‘girl coming out’) + ON AIR (‘being broadcast’).
16 REFERRED Consulted an umpire having made a mistake (8)
  REF (‘umpire’) + ERRED (‘having made a mistake’).
18 DICED Risked being cut to bits (5)
  Double def.
20 GASP Fight for breath while doctor comes round (4)
  AS (‘while’) with GP (‘doctor’) around it.
21 ANTAGONIST Opponent created stagnation (10)
  Anagram (‘created’) of STAGNATION.
23 FIESTAS It’s safe to break up for holidays (7)
  Ang. (‘to break up’) of ITS SAFE.
24 REQUIRE Demand soldiers get some paper (7)
  RE (Royal Engineers, (‘soldiers’) + QUIRE (‘some paper’).
25 RIDDEN Travelled to get free study (6)
  RID (‘free’) + DEN (‘study’).
26 ASLEEP Like skin that’s turned numb (6)
  AS (‘like’) + LEEP (= PEEL or ‘skin’, reversed) to give ‘asleep’, as in ‘my foot’s gone to sleep’, i.e. is ‘numb’.
Down
1 SHELL Case husband found in market (5)
  H[usband] in SELL (to ‘market’).
2 EMOTIVE Earl has reason to be touchy (7)
  E[arl] + MOTIVE (‘reason’).
3 CONTENDER Rival is against the proposal (9)
  CON (‘against’) + TENDER (‘proposal’).
5 TRIPE Note about epitaph is nonsense (5)
  TE (7th ‘note’ of the sol-fa scale) around RIP (‘epitaph’).
6 MEISSEN China seems in fashion (7)
  Anagram (‘fashion’) of SEEMS IN.
7 EARLY BIRD Barry lied about being the first up (5,4)
  Ang. (‘about’) of BARRY LIED.
10 CANDIDATE Frank’s fed up being an examinee (9)
  CANDID (‘frank’) + ATE (‘fed up’).
13 GRENADIER Dearer gin upset guard (9)
  Anag. (‘upset’) of DEARER GIN.
15 BY DEGREES How undergraduates advance a bit at a time (2,7)
  Cryptic def.
17 EXPOSED Former partner modelled naked (7)
  EX (‘former partner’) + POSED (‘modelled’).
19 CENSURE Clubs guarantee condemnation (7)
  C[lubs, (card-suit) + ENSURE (‘guarantee’).
21 AWARE Informed of fighting in A&E (5)
  WAR (‘fighting’) in A+E.
22 SCRAP Break up a fight (5)
  Double def.

*anagram

2 comments on “Financial Times 15,550 by ARMONIE”

  1. Thanks Armonie and Grant

    It was a very gentle challenge to do over lunch with his trademark crisp clueing and his wont every so often to throw in the borderline definition. Today it was ‘Dunce’ for ILLITERATE – it can be so, but somebody who hasn’t had the chance to learn can certainly be the latter without being the former.

    That was my second to last in – SHELL was last.

  2. Thanks for the succinct introduction on the home page, which tempted me to have a go.
    My only suggestion is that 15 down might be regarded as a double definition: undergraduates advance to become graduates when they gain their degrees.

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