Quite a few non-English words (only some of which are Scottish) in this one, but not too high up the hardness scale, as far as I remember. Thanks to Azed.
Across | ||||||||
1 | DOG-PARSLEY | Cook leg with spray misguidedly? It’s not a real herb (10) DO (cook) + (LEG SPRAY)* – aka Fool’s Parsley or Aethusa cynapium, a poisonous plant that looks a bit like real parsley |
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10 | AGORA | What Israelis will spend in marketplace of old (5) Double definition – as well as the familiar marketplace meaning it’s also one hundredth of a shekel, currently worth about a quarter of a UK penny |
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12 | TOPHET | Waste dump, upper surface on fire (6) TOP + HET (agitated, angry, so presumably “on fire”) |
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13 | NON-EGO | Everyone stays for personality, objectively? (6) If everyone stays then NONE GO |
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14 | GEMMA | Gardener’s first novel bud (5) G[ardener] + EMMA (Jane Austen novel) |
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15 | ON TARGET | Tot, anger boiling, well aimed (8, 2 words) (TOT ANGER)* |
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16 | ENDITE | Former charge: bring it to a close before end of audience (6) END IT + [audienc]E |
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17 | DONE | Fellow with little English cheated (4) DON + E |
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18 | MEASURED | Stable placed in grassy field, as is deliberate (8) SURE in MEAD |
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23 | WAR-WHOOP | Slogan relative with love inserted in part of threadwork (8, 2 words) WHO (relative pronoun) + O in WARP |
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25 | CAPO | One such (though not born abroad!) (4) CAPONE (Al C, who was a Mafia boss or capo) less NE (French “born”). I find it quite hard to classify this – it’s kind of an &lit, as Capone was born in New York City, so not “abroad” from where his activities took place |
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27 | VIELLE | Hurdy-gurdy played live by the French (6) LIVE* + LE |
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29 | ACQUIRAL | What’ll demonstrate such attainment? By its sound, a musical group will, briefly (8) Homophone of “a choir’ll” |
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30 | BRITS | Fish (various), those originating in island group? (5) Double definition |
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31 | IBERIS | Flower to occupy position in flag (6) BE (Chambers has “to occupy a position in space”) in IRIS (flag) |
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*32 | RIBALD | Coarse (6) The competition word |
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33 | DRACO | Group of stars to perform touring Carmen? (5) RAC (“car men”) in DO. Carmen for AA or RAC (I./e. “car men”) is fairly common, but I was a bit surprised to see Azed using it, but I see that Chambers defines carman as “a man who drives a car or cart”, though as it’s archaic presumably not a car in the modern sense |
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34 | PRESSWOMAN | Member of fourth estate cultivating some prawns (10) (SOME PRAWNS)* |
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Down | ||||||||
1 | DANSE MACABRE | Damn scarabee is represented in this allegorical series (12, 2 words) (DAMN SCARABEE)* |
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2 | GONADAL | Girl holds on, notice, concerning reproduction (7) ON + AD in GAL |
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3 | PRÉCIS | Abstract price adjusted before start of sale (6) PRICE* + S[ale] |
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4 | RHONE | Major flow of water in Scots gully (5) Double definition, with a circumflex on the o for the “major flow of water” (i.e. river) sense |
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5 | STOTTER | Children given lift, school period ending early ? it’s smashing for wee ones (7) Reverse of TOTS + TER[m] – it’s “a person or thing that is admired, a smasher”, with “wee ones” indicating that it’s a Scots word |
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6 | LOGAN | Bit of wood on old rocker (5) LOG + AN (old version of “on”) |
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7 | ÉPERDU | Mash pureed? R. Blanc’s sidetracked (6) PUREED*, with Raymond Blanc appearing to tell us it’s a French word |
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8 | MEMENTO | Chaps captivated came across love token (7) MEN in MET + O |
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9 | STATESPERSON | Government minister perhaps resents a post being reshuffled (12) (RESENTS A POST)* – it’s perhaps questionable whether any of the latest crop of minsters are worthy of being described thus |
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11 | GOON | Don’t stop silly name being applied to saccharin (4) Two different wordplays: GO ON (don’t stop) or GOO + N, with the definition (“silly” as a noun) in the middle |
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19 | EPACRIS | Spacier spreads revealing heath-like plant (7) SPACIER* |
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20 | RAMRODS | Martinets giving student hostel a going-over with head around (7) Reverse DORM in RAS (headland) |
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21 | WOLFRAM | Predatory beast on top of its victim in compound? (7) WOLF + RAM – Wolfram is an old name for Tungsten (chemical symbol W), but also “a native compound of tungstate of iron and manganese” |
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22 | SOUTAR | Scottish snob unfashionable in his taste (6) OUT in SAR (Scots form of “savour”, taste) |
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24 | HERERO | Bantu woman’s one ’eld in ’igh esteem (6) HER (woman’s) + [h]ERO |
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26 | AISLE | Wherein crew moves around and is opening drink (5) IS in ALE – the “crew” being e.g. aircraft cabin crew |
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27 | VAILS | Lowers 50% of sail in vessel (5) [sa]IL in VAS |
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28 | LAIC | Non-pro RAF rank I’ll be in (4) I in LAC (Leading AirCraftsman) |
Thanks for such a thorough blog, answered a lot of my minor points.
I am not overly fond of CAPO, you really need the answer first and then an example of one, then mess with it to get the answer, very circular and not convinced there is really a definition.
I wrestled with BRITS for far too long thinking that T must be in some island group.
SOUTAR was in the recent 50th year special with the SNOB idea or it could have been a long search for the first letter.
Thanks Azed and Andrew
9dn: I think “perhaps” is part of the definition here.
Pelham Barton: yes, you’re right; I’ll amend the blog
No real major problems for me. I do like the word TOPHET. According to Chambers it’s “an ancient place of human sacrifice near Jerusalem, the valley of Hinnom or part of it, later a place of refuse disposal; hence Hell”. I knew the word from my youth from Tophet Bastion, a crag on Great Gable in the Lake District next to Great Hell Gate (a scree gully)
Thanks to Azed & Andrew. CAPO does seem not quite up to Azed’s usual, spot-on, clarity and I felt re=assured when I read the blog. Thought this was very PC with STATESPERSON & PRESSWOMAN.
Re TOPHET. The question of whether or not the Phoenicians did child sacrifices appears to be still debated. On a visit to Carthage ruins some years ago we went to a children’s graveyard. We were told that wealthy families, whose child was chosen, would pay a slave to give up a child as a substitute. Pretty horrible. No wonder later religions thought ill of the Phoenicians.
Roz@1 and Keith Thomas@5: I agree that there is no definition. Andrew’s tentative &lit doesn’t work for me because the whole clue describes one particular capo.
I wasn’t too fond of CAPO, either, but also thought 29ac, ACQUIRAL, didn’t entirely work. I understand the homophone, but don’t see why a choir might “demonstrate” acquiral. Usually in a clue of that type there is some connection – for example, if acquiral specifically meant the attainment of a correct note, that would provide the reference. Perhaps I’m just being over-fussy, but I thought it was a bit clumsy for Azed. Roz@1, I too thought BRITS was going to be T in an island group, but fortunately set it aside until I’d got enough crossing letters to see my mistake.
MunroMaiden@8, I took the whole first sentence of 29A as the definition, so acquiral is what (trivially?) demonstrates attainment. Also saw the wordplay as a charade of a homophone of “a choir” + “will” briefly.
Well, the second part of that made sense when I wrote it, but should not have.
I am new to doing the AZED so now feel better about failing on CAPO and ACQUIRAL after reading the blog. Overnight I was still puzzling about BRITS which I’d also missed but now see Brit in Chambers as a young herring etc. That feels like useful crossword general knowledge!
Thank you Andrew for the blog to fill my gaps and AZED for providing this entertainment.
Well done CanberraGirl@11 for getting so far, when I was learning to do Azed I would be lucky to get halfway. BRITS and many other fish are very common in Azed, I was happy with the fish part but the word play would not drop for a while for me.
TimS @9 I agree with your reasoning it does work but I agree with MunroMaiden@8 that the two parts would usually have some connection.
Final thought , we have been watching “Sunset Song” on BBC4, there are so many Scottish words in it that Azed uses . I think MunroMaiden has an advantage over all of us doing Azed.
Roz@13 – I know more obscure Scottish words from crosswords than hearing them spoken! Folk here no more speak of a “soutar” than English people would of a “snob”. I would grant you “Stotter”, though 🙂