[If you’re attending York S&B please see comments 32&33] - here
Good surfaces, good fun, good puzzle.
A satisfying Tuesday solve. Thanks to Aardvark.
ACROSS | ||
1 | SCHOLAR |
One learned from the Sun about celebrity hearsay primarily (7)
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S.OLAR ('from the sun') around 1st letters of 'Celebrity Hearsay'. 'Learn-ed' as adjective, of course. |
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5 | POTTAGE |
Soup ‘eated, temperature controlled by attendant (7)
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hOT (i.e., heated with H dropped) + T[emperature] both in P.AGE (an 'attendant'). |
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9 | COMET |
Satisfied with fellow high-flyer (5)
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CO ('fellow', as in 'co-worker') + MET ('satisfied'). |
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10 | FRICASSEE |
Cooked meat Sue emptied into container on weekday (9)
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FRI[day] + SuE, eviscerated, in CAS.E ('container'). |
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11 | EQUIPMENT |
Supplies endless adhesive to cover crack (9)
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cE.MENT ('adhesive' without front end) surrounds QUIP (a joke, a 'crack'). |
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12 | ERASE |
Delete some lines a reporter retracted (5)
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Reversed inclusion in 'linES A REporter'. |
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13 | DIG IN |
Work hard with cut finger, note (3,2)
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DIGIt ('finger', shortened) + N[ote]. |
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15 | INSWINGER |
Ball, popular vocalist, gaining weight (9)
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IN ('popular') + S.INGER containing W[eight]. |
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18 | CARTWHEEL |
New teacher and student embracing women’s revolutionary movement (9)
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Anagram ('new') of TEACHER + L[earner] around W[omen]. |
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19 | MOTIF |
Cat knocked back one made by Mr Kipling? It’s a recurring theme (5)
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Reversal of TOM ('cat') + IF (poem by Rudyard Kipling). |
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21 | APPLE |
Porter perhaps carrying very soft fruit (5)
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A.LE (perhaps 'porter') contains PP ('very soft'). |
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23 | PARACHUTE |
As normal, pilot when outside shed safety gear (9)
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PAR ('as normal') + AC.E (good 'pilot') around HUT. |
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25 | GRASSLESS |
One blowing whistle that ends football game alas berates such a pitch? (9)
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GRASS (an informer, a 'whistleblower') + end letters of 'footbal', 'gamE', 'alaS', 'berateS'. |
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26 | RAKED |
Did some gardening in the nude (initially roasting for November) (5)
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nAKED, its N[ovember] replaced by 1st of 'Roasting'. |
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27 | SAMOYED |
Upsetting to involve doctor with the old dog (7)
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SA.D ('upsetting') includes MO ('doctor') + YE (old form of 'the'). |
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28 | SHYSTER |
Unscrupulous type reserved vacant seat with little hesitation (7)
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SHY ('reserved') + emptied 'SeaT' + ER ('little hesitation'). |
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DOWN | ||
1 | SUCCEED |
Follow broadcast around university colleges (7)
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To 'broadcast' is to (scatter) S.EED, which surrounds U[niversity] + 2x C[ollege]. |
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2 | HAMBURGER |
German course? (9)
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Cryptic food, & kinda double def of person & meat bun, both from Hamburg. |
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3 | LET UP |
Stop the Alsatian approaching sheep (3,2)
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LE (Fr. 'the', hence 'Alsatian') + TUP ('sheep'). |
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4 | REFLEXIVE |
On escape around unknown island, Victor needs a particular case (9)
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RE (about, 'on') + FLE.E contain X ('unknown') + I[sland] + V[ictor]. |
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5 | PAINT |
Minor hit screening in colour (5)
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PA.T ('minor hit') includes IN. |
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6 | TRAPEZIUM |
Small bone mirror in Ritz adjusted by posh maiden (9)
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APE (to 'mirror') in anagram ('adjusted') of RITZ + U ('posh') + M[aiden]. |
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7 | AT SEA |
Occasionally Matty, Stefan and Jack found here? (2,3)
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Alternate letters ('occasionally') of 'mAtTy StEfAn'. Jack's a sailor, of course. |
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8 | EYEWEAR |
Perhaps shades of European tree attracting attention (7)
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E[uropean] + YEW + EAR ('attention') |
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14 | NEW JERSEY |
Home of Newark’s latest cheese producer? (3,6)
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NEW ('latest') + JERSEY (cow, possible 'cheese producer'). |
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16 | SCLEROSIS |
Complaint from family member after dancing closer (9)
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SIS[ter] after anagram ('dancing') of CLOSER. |
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17 | GUTBUCKET |
Jazz-playing style good? According to German male: out of this world (9)
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GUT ('good, according to German') + BUCK ('male') +E[xtra] T[errestrial]. 'Gutbucket' jazz is loud, hard-swingin' & down-homey. |
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18 | COAL GAS |
Leaves to gather seaweed for fuel (4,3)
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CO.S lettuce containing ALGA ('seaweed'). |
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20 | FIELDER |
Motor racing by oldster leading to slip possibly (7)
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F[ormula] 1 + ELDER. |
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22 | PSALM |
Religious song Saint’s taken in hand, partly (5)
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S[aint] in P.ALM. |
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23 | PLEAD |
Beg with quiet restraint (5)
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P ('quiet') + LEAD (restraint, as in a dog-lead). |
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24 | CORNY |
Old-fashioned seamen, with modest exterior (5)
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CO.Y ('modest') contains R[oyal] N[avy]. |
And a pangram to boot. Didn’t know GUTBUCKET. Mostly straightforward but a few very tricky ones.
I got the Gutbucket Pangram Blues!
Thanks all
Needed a bit of work to get this out. Had to “hit and hope” in going with the wordplay for the never heard of GUTBUCKET. Others were at least familiar, though I don’t really understand how REFLEXIVE = ‘a particular case’.
I also had a minor quibble with SCLEROSIS as a ‘Complaint’. When preceded by a word like “multiple” or terms such as “athero-” or “oto-” it refers to a specific condition or pathological process, but by itself it just means “hardening”.
I enjoyed the cricket related clues and spotting the pangram at the end.
Thanks to Aardvark and Grant
WordPlodder@3: REFLEXIVE is a case in the grammatical sense, referring to the relation of a noun or pronoun to another word in the sentence. In the reflexive case the subject and object of a verb are the same person or thing. In English it’s expressed using reflexive pronouns – “The man blamed himself”.
Hello and thanks, Tom_I @4. I’d heard of REFLEXIVE verbs but when it came to cases – nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive, dative and ablative are the only ones I know – REFLEXIVE just didn’t come up.
Thanks again for the explanation.
A minor quibble on 11ac: “endless” usually means “unfinished”. I don’t recall seeing it mean “unstarted” before. And as a Yank, I had to look up why an “inswinger” was a ball (similar to an inside pitch in baseball).
Otherwise, a lovely pangram puzzle and great fun. Thanks to both.
EdK @ 6
It’s removing the front end not the back end. Seems OK to me.
Very entertaining puzzle from Aardvark. Mental ticks by several I enjoyed and nothing I could quibble with. Thanks to Grant for elucidating one or two where I was too lazy (or dim) to sort out the wordplay. GUTBUCKET was a lovely new word for the day and as a cricket fan INSWINGER was a particular favourite.
A bit of thought required to finish this, but we did manage it. LOI was EYEWEAR – we could see the three elements of the word but it didn’t click till we stood back and looked at it as a whole.
We wondered if there was a mini-theme of food, with POTTAGE, FRICASSEE, APPLE and HAMBURGER, plus reference in the clues to soup and cheese.
Thanks, Aardvark and Grant.
Thanks Aardvark and Grant
A meaty early-week puzzle with a lot going on in most of the clues and took a good part of what turned out to be a busy work day to get it finished. No hard words to negotiate, apart from the unknown GUTBUCKET, only very well crafted and nicely disguised word play or definitions to negotiate in the solve. Liked the concise ‘German course’ at 2d and as allan@9 says, EYEWEAR was cleverly defined and was also needed to be pieced together from the word play to sit back and recognise what was going on.
Finished in the NW corner with LET UP, SCHOLAR (which shouldn’t have taken as long as it did) but most likely caused by having to change the initial INFLEXIVE to REFLEXIVE for it to eventually fall.