Guardian Quiptic 937 / Matilda

The scheduled blogger is still in York so I am covering for him. This is Matilda’s third appearance in the Quiptic slot but the first one I have solved so I didn’t know what to expect.

Whilst progress was reasonably steady (my main delay was in the SW quadrant), I felt that some of the clues were a little tricky for a Quiptic (though my experience of this series is very limited so I may be misjudging the normal level of difficulty).

If I wasn’t wanting to go and cook breakfast, I could mention a few quibbles (eg the anagram indicator in 12ac), but hunger is getting the better of me.

Across
1 Drug / memorial (6)
TABLET – double def.

4 Stop sign, change sides (6)
CANCEL – CANCEr (sign) with the ‘r’ replaced with L (change sides)

9 Where stations are / throughout (3,5,3,4)
ALL ALONG THE LINE – double def.

10 More ferocious male reptile (6)
MADDER – M (male) ADDER (reptile)

11 Bats, beaver or badger (8)
OVERBEAR – an anagram (bats) of BEAVER OR

12 Please Mr Turner, try again (8)
RESAMPLE – an anagram (turner) of PLEASE MR

14 Call in the Spanish to do some painting (6)
ENAMEL – NAME (call) in EL (the Spanish)

15 The British nasty bug (6)
WEEVIL – WE (the British) EVIL (nasty)

18 Height of skill, if learner shifts quietly (8)
ALTITUDE – ApTITUDE (skill) with L (learner) replacing (if … shifts) the ‘p’ (quietly)

21 Arrival of servicewoman with no visa, curiously (8)
NEWCOMER – an anagram (curiously) of [s]ER[vi]CEWOM[a]N (servicewoman with no visa)

22 Strength of one pursued by the beast (6)
BEAUTY – double def. – the second referring to the fairy tale

24 “Leave note yonder … “. Poetry? On the contrary (5,3,7)
QUITE THE REVERSE – QUIT (leave) E (note) THERE (yonder) VERSE (poetry)

25 Stay affected under drug (6)
ENDURE – an anagram (affected) of UNDER followed by E (drug)

26 Candy listened to music by Bach and Handel? (6)
SUITES – sounds like (listened to) ‘sweets’ (candy)

Down
1 Culture makes it legal (7)
TILLAGE – an anagram (makes) of IT LEGAL

2 Boring student bores group (5)
BLAND – L (student) in (bores) BAND (group)

3 Bloke got ripped off to some extent but it made him feel important (3,4)
EGO TRIP – contained in (to some extent) ‘blokE GOT RIPped’

5 Thrash the late competitor (7)
ATHLETE – an anagram (thrash) of THE LATE

6 Someone to get mad with priest (9)
CELEBRANT – CELEB (someone) RANT (get mad)

7 Family wrinkle and what causes it (7)
LINEAGE – LINE (wrinkle) AGE (what causes it)

8 Disregard crazy Ringo — Beatle’s number two (6)
IGNORE – an anagram (crazy) of RINGO followed by [b]E[atle] (Beatle’s number two)

13 Backed bill, left with nothing to replace the first article (9)
ADVOCATED – AD (bill) plus VaCATED (left) with O (nothing) replacing the ‘a’ (the first article)

16 Hang by river — delightful! (7)
EXECUTE – EXE (river) CUTE (delightful)

17 Climb with hero uncovered part of a circuit (7)
LIMITER – [c]LIM[b] [w]IT[h] [h]ER[o] (climb with hero uncovered)

18 Settled on a good pipe (6)
AGREED – A G (good) REED (pipe)

19 Picture 1 across trimmed with gold (7)
TABLEAU – TABLE[t] (1 across trimmed) plus AU (gold)

20 Hates being put back into slowest set educationally (7)
DETESTS – hidden (being … into) reversal (put back) in ‘sloweST SET EDucationally’

23 Not a female spy (5)
AGENT – A GENT (not a female)

16 comments on “Guardian Quiptic 937 / Matilda”

  1. Thanks Matilda and Gaufrid
    Your instincts are correct, Gaufrid – this was much too hard for a Quiptic. Some strange definitions too – BEAUTY = “strength”? MADDER = “more ferocious”? WEEVIL = “bug”?
    I didn’t see what was going in in ADVOCATED, and I was confident that 16d would end URE, so I wasted some time on that.
    I liked OVERBEAR, in fact – “bats” was OK as an anagram indicator for me. NEWCOMER was another favourite (though not a Quiptic standard clue).

  2. Thanks both. Far too hard for a Quiptic, another audition for a place in the paper.
    Hope you enjoyed your breakfast, Gaufrid

  3. muffin @1
    The “strange definitions” can be confirmed in the usual references. For example, under ‘mad’ in Collins it has “(of animals) unusually ferocious”.

    I too was happy with ‘bats’ as an anagram indicator. The one I mentioned was the following clue (12ac) which uses ‘turner’.

  4. Gaufrid @3
    I don’t know which “usual references” you are referring to, but there is no mention of “strength” under “beauty”, or vice versa in my Chambers; similarly for “weevil” and “bug” (weevils are beetles, in fact).

  5. muffin @4
    Chambers Thesaurus gives ‘advantage’ as a synonym for both ‘beauty’ and ‘strength’. Chambers, Collins and the ODE all have ‘any insect’ as a definition for ‘bug’ and I’m sure you will agree that a beetle is an insect.

  6. Chris
    From Collins:
    culture – the act or practice of tilling or cultivating the soil
    tillage – the act, process, or art of tilling

  7. Thank you for standing in, Gaufrid.

    I disagree with muffin and Shirl: this was not ‘much too hard for a Quiptic’. All the niggles mentioned were, in my opinion, fine. ‘Turner’ as an anagrind? Seen more esoteric. The SW corner did have some trickier clues (it took me a while to get LIMITER) but overall there is plenty here to get started with if you are a novice, and then more to chew over, some of which – like LIMITER – might show you a less common device.

    Thank you, Matilda.

  8. Thank you Gaufrid and Matilda.

    I think that this was much too difficult for a Quiptic. Not for the first time I solved last Saturday’s prize crossword without too much difficulty but failed the Quiptic here in the SW corner.

  9. Not sure this was too hard for a Quiptic (whatever that is nowadays), perhaps it was.
    What I do know is that I enjoyed this crossword very much.

    Yes, Matilda used the ‘one letter replaces another’ device three times, which is a bit of an overkill in any crossword.
    In my opinion, ‘turner’ as an anagrind is awful but I’ve seen it being used before – only once, though.
    And in my world of crosswords, ‘visa’ needs an extra anagram indicator before deletion (21ac).
    There are perhaps a few more quibbles.

    But having said all that, it didn’t spoil the fun.
    The ‘uncovered’ trick (with multiple fodders) is trademark Philistine & Arachne, surprised to see it here.

    Thanks to Gaufrid & Matilda, for the entertainment.

  10. Yes, culture as a more generic term for agriculture. In fact, Latin ‘cultura’ meaning “growing or cultivation” is the origin of the word ‘culture’

  11. Hi again, Gaufrid
    Could you give me an example of a sentence in which “beauty” could replace “strength” while retaining the same meaning?

  12. Hi Muffin
    Off the top of my head, how about ‘the beauty/strength/advantage of his plan was that it would …’.

  13. Hi Gaufrid
    Yes, something similar had occurred to me. The meaning isn’t quite the same though, is it?

    I found the reference to bug=insect in Chambers. It is given as N Am.

  14. …I mean a plan can be beautiful without being strong, strong without being beautiful (as many are), and advantageous without being either!

  15. I agree with those who say this is much too hard for a Quiptic. It’s a very decent crossword, but I come to the Quiptic with the expectation of being able to solve it in under 30 minutes. This took over an hour to not finish …

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