Financial Times 17,240 by FLIMSY

Today brings a pleasant solve with some nice surfaces from Flimsy.

On quite a few of these, I was misdirected to one end of the clue as the definition before realizing that, no, I had it backwards.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 TYPEFACE
Kind fellow by a church font (8)
TYPE (kind) + F (fellow) + A + CE (church)
5 AFFORD
Bear a loud American president (6)
A + F (loud, in music) + FORD (American president, i.e., Gerald R. Ford)
9 FLAGRANT
Tirade after Jack’s naked (8)
FLAG (jack) + RANT (tirade)
10 RATTLE
Instrument upset conductor (6)
Triple definition, including a reference to Simon Rattle
12 EVERY
All leave early on a regular basis (5)
Alternating letters of (on a regular basis) [L]E[A]V[E] E[A]R[L]Y
13 AVERMENTS
Servant upset about this writer’s declarations (9)
Anagram of (upset) SERVANT around (about) ME (this writer)
14 BEATEN
Scoffed after bachelor’s defeated (6)
B (bachelor) + EATEN (scoffed)
16 PENGUIN
Writer with weapon bagging one bird (7)
PEN (writer) + GUN (weapon) around (bagging) I (one)
19 ON THE GO
In shopfront he got busy (2,3,2)
Hidden in [SHOPFR]ONT HE GO[T]
21 INSECT
Nicest bats for cricket? (6)
Anagram of (bats) NICEST
23 BUCHAREST
Butchers moved outside centre of Singapore City (9)
Anagram of (moved) BUTCHERS around (outside) centre of [SING]A[PORE]
25 SPRAT
Quarrel about river fish (5)
SPAT (quarrel) around (about) R (river)
26 ELATED
Story turned editor wild with excitement (6)
TALE (story) reversed (turned) + ED (editor)
27 INDICATE
Show I acted in is broadcast (8)
Anagram of (is broadcast) I ACTED IN
28 SAMOSA
Polynesian country concealing business’s last turnover (6)
SAMOA (Polynesian country) around (concealing) last letter of [BUSINES]S
29 FEELINGS
Passion from two Europeans in romantic entanglements (8)
E + E (two Europeans) inside (in) FLINGS (romantic entanglements)
DOWN
1 TOFFEE
Golf supporter swallowing rotten sweet (6)
TEE (golf supporter) around (swallowing) OFF (rotten)
2 PLACEMENT
Mountain climbing on secure location (9)
ALP (mountain) reversed (climbing) + CEMENT (secure)
3 FORAY
Sally in favour of 24 hours without daughter (5)
FOR (in favour of) + [D]AY (24 hours, without “d” [daughter])
4 CONTAIN
Control prisoner with whip one’s grabbed (7)
CON (prisoner) + I (one) inside (is grabbed [by]) TAN (whip)
6 FRAGMENTS
Female with cloth intended to leave adult small pieces (9)
F (female) + RAG (cloth) + ME[A]NT (intended, missing [to leave] “a” [adult]) + S (small)
7 OFTEN
Frequently working to keep this newspaper profitable, ultimately (5)
ON (working) around (to keep) FT (this newspaper) + E (last letter of [“ultimately”] [PROFITABL]E)
8 DRESSING
Bandage doctor put on writer lacking length (8)
DR (doctor) + [L]ESSING (writer, i.e., Doris Lessing, minus [lacking] “l” [length])
11 PEEP
Look both ways (4)
“Both ways” signaling a palindrome
15 TEENAGERS
Youths eat greens irregularly (9)
Anagram of (irregularly) EAT GREENS
17 UNCERTAIN
Nicer aunt shot up in the air (9)
Anagram of (shot) NICER AUNT
18 COBBLERS
They might make platforms rot (8)
Double (and slightly cryptic) definition
20 OPEN
Frank’s leg restricting exercises (4)
ON (leg) around (restricting) PE (exercises)
21 INTENSE
Sounds like where campers could be passionate (7)
Homophone of (sounds like) IN TENTS (where campers could be)
22 STRESS
Anxiety as American’s cut hair (6)
[A]S (minus [cut] “A” [American]) + TRESS (hair)
24 CHASM
Has PM lost power after Conservative rift? (5)
C (Conservative) + HAS + [P]M (minus [lost] “p” [power])
25 SPILL
Papa poorly after onset of stomach upset (5)
S (first letter of [“onset of”] S[TOMACH]) + P (Papa, in NATO phonetic alphabet) + ILL (poorly)

15 comments on “Financial Times 17,240 by FLIMSY”

  1. Well that was easy. I was finished almost before I’d started. But it was most enjoyable, with no sticky moments. I’d never thought of a samosa as a turnover, but I guess it is. And I didn’t know “aver” had a noun form. My dictionary says it hails from the US. My only head-scratch: I looked through my dictionary’s 26 definitions of “leg” but didn’t find “on”.

    Thanks Flimsy & Cineraria.

  2. Geoff@1: The leg side is the on side in cricket. That is about as deep as my understanding of the sport goes.

  3. 13A was new to me.

    I didn’t understand 18D until I came here. Hey , Geoff, did you know that “cobblers” means “rubbish”? I don’t think that I have heard that here in Australia.

  4. Yes, Peter, I’ve often heard it, admittedly quite often in British television shows. I seem to recall it in Fawlty Towers, as one example.

  5. ‘Cobblers’ is rhyming slang – cobbler’s awls. And thanks Flimsy, and Cineraria for an excellent blog.

  6. I try not to overexplain, (except for identifying full names, which I personally sometimes find difficult to research), but it is hard to guess who might be familiar with what, and I assume we can follow up any remaining obscurities in the comments.

  7. Thanks for the blog, neat and concise clues here. I did like the platforms bit in COBBLERS .
    Geoff@6 it was mainly popularised by Steptoe and Son from 1962 . The old man Albert would respond to the dreams of his son Harold with the phrase you mentioned.

    My cricket knowledge is solely from crosswords, Azed is a cricket fan. Why do we have LEG stump, square LEG , long LEG, short LEG but mid ON , long ON , ON drive etc ?

  8. We had to check AVERMENTS in the dictionary and took a while to get 1ac as we thought it might be an actual font name that was wanted. Otherwise it was all pretty straightforward and enjoyable.
    Thanks, Flimsy and Cineraria.

  9. Roz @ 10

    I suspect it may be because the LEG positions are parallel to or behind batters, while ON positions are in front of them.

  10. Macmorris @ 8, I was going to ask what “awls” rhymes with, but I’ve found it. No need to lower the tone of this blog. 😉

  11. Now Geoff, I forgive you a lack of knowledge of some of the more obscure English cultural references, but leg / on cricket terminology? Surely no excuse for an Aussie not knowing?

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