Weekend puzzle from the FT of January 21, 2023
It’s about time for another Mudd. My first-in was 7 (NOUGAT) and I finished the top half quickly but needed some help for 1d, the not so well known Pericles. I finished the puzzle with 29 (PRONTO) and 30 (TRAVESTY). My favourites are 16 (EMULATE) and 24 (AZORES).
P.S. If you go to the FifteenSquared home page, you will see the news that Geoff Moss (aka Gaufrid) died last week. Geoff was the custodian of FifteenSquared for about 13 years.
ACROSS | ||
1 | PERUSE |
Study country’s literature, finally (6)
|
PERU (country) + S (‘s) + [literatur]E | ||
4 | SARDINES |
Celebrity abandoning last of meat eats fish (8)
|
S[t]AR (celebrity abandoning [mea]T) + DINES (eats) | ||
9 | ROTTER |
Cad, bad apple perhaps? (6)
|
Double definition | ||
10 | CATAPULT |
Fling, a type of dancing embraced by following group (8)
|
A (a) + TAP (type of dancing) together in (embraced by) CULT (following group) | ||
12 | CALAMARI |
Edible mollusc has caught malaria, strangely (8)
|
C (caught) + anagram (strangely) of MALARIA. My partner would fault this clue. She insists that ‘calamari’ is a method of cooking a particular edible mollusc (i.e. squid) and does not define the mollusc itself. I find that Collins gives some strength to her argument. | ||
13 | GARAGE |
Parking space rubbish cleared out at the centre (6)
|
GAR[b]AGE | ||
15 | ELSE |
Other part of channel sealed (4)
|
Hidden word (part of) | ||
16 | EMULATE |
Copy bird like the parrot in the Parrot Sketch (7)
|
EMU (bird) + LATE (like the parrot in the Monty Python sketch) | ||
20 | EXECUTE |
Kill flower, sweet (7)
|
EXE (flower — that is a river) + CUTE (sweet) | ||
21 | ZERO |
Nothing found in Singapore, Zambia reviewed (4)
|
Reverse (reviewed) hidden word (found in) | ||
25 | ABOARD |
A committee on ship (6)
|
A (a) + BOARD (committee) | ||
26 | PUZZLING |
Confusing activity of solver? (8)
|
Double definition | ||
28 | DING-DONG |
Argument, sound as a bell? (4-4)
|
Double definition. A furious verbal argument can be called a ding-dong. | ||
29 | PRONTO |
King in card game that’s dropped on immediately (6)
|
R (king) in (in) PONTO[on] | ||
30 | TRAVESTY |
Stylistic imitation underwear in carrier (8)
|
VEST (underwear) in (in) TRAY (carrier) | ||
31 | ISOLDE |
Wagnerian character is getting on with narrative in the end (6)
|
IS (is) + OLD (getting on) + [narrativ]E | ||
DOWN | ||
1 | PERICLES |
Shakespearean character pierces heart of Marlowe when furious (8)
|
[mar]L[owe] in (pierces) anagram (when furious) of PIERCES. “Pericles, Prince of Tyre” is one of Will’s lesser known works. | ||
2 | RUTHLESS |
Unfeeling, without a girl? (8)
|
RUTH-LESS (without a girl) | ||
3 | STEAMY |
Hot east winds, I say! (6)
|
Anagram (winds) of EAST + MY (I say) | ||
5 | ALAS |
Capital of Turkey ripped from geography book, I’m sorry to say (4)
|
A[t]LAS (‘T’ removed from geography book) | ||
6 | DIAMANTE |
Animated moves, sparkling stuff (8)
|
Anagram (moves) of ANIMATED | ||
7 | NOUGAT |
Sweet thing turning to a gun (6)
|
Anagram (turning) of TO A GUN | ||
8 | SITTER |
Model, certain winner (6)
|
Double definition. The second must refer to ‘sitter’ in the sense of ‘doddle’ or a ‘piece of cake” but it seems a stretch to me that being able to do something blind/sitting down/asleep/dead (see 16ac) necessarily leads to winning, never mind being a certain winner. Am I missing something? | ||
11 | PRIMACY |
Margin’s cut fast for church office (7)
|
RIM (margin) in (cut) PACY (fast) | ||
14 | FLAT OUT |
At top speed, home and away (4,3)
|
FLAT (home) + OUT (away) | ||
17 | OXBRIDGE |
Powerful animal with reach across two educational institutions (8)
|
OX (powerful animal) + BRIDGE (reach across) | ||
18 | REGIONAL |
Local gaoler in rogue (8)
|
Anagram (rogue) of GAOLER IN | ||
19 | MONGOOSE |
After day, bird finds small mammal (8)
|
MON (day) + GOOSE (bird) | ||
22 | PANDIT |
Spirtual teacher verbally criticised that object (6)
|
PAND (homophone of “panned”) + IT (that object) | ||
23 | CORNEA |
Operation ultimately accessing heart and a part of the eye (6)
|
[operatio]N in (accessing) CORE (heart) + A (a) | ||
24 | AZORES |
Gold in a spice detailed in island group (6)
|
OR (gold) in (in) A (a) + ZES[t] (spice detailed) | ||
27 | KNOT |
Bird in lark? No, thrush (4)
|
Hidden word (in). We met ‘knot’ as a bird just a few weeks ago. |
While it has been nice to experience a variety of setters recently, it was wonderful to find Mudd back again. I was on the same wavelength and I love his sense of humour. Unusually for me, I knocked it out in a single sitting, solving and parsing all clues in one hit.
I loved the parrot clue, and quoted it to several unsuspecting friends through the week. Other favourites were FLAT OUT, PERUSE and STEAMY.
As always, lots to learn. I have never seen SITTER used to mean certain win, so I cannot answer Pete’s question. I also had a similar note about CALAMARI. Not sure I have seen DING DONG used as a noun before, and I was horrified to see that “flower” not only points to the hundreds of blooming plants, but also the thousands of rivers. But, I worked it out, and quite liked EXECUTE too.
Many smiles this week. Thanks Mudd for an enjoyable puzzle and thanks Pete for your great explanation
Thanks for the blog, I agree with you and Martyn – Many smiles this week – is a good summary . EMULATE is very clever I also liked CATAPULT .
For CALAMARI we need the views of an Italian speaker.
SITTER , Chambers has – an easy shot – (from sitting bird) now often applied to sports such as football as common usage.
It also has – anything difficult to fail in – which just about gives Mudd cover for me.
Having checked my assorted Harraps and Collins dictionaries, le calmar/le calamari (Fr), Il calamaro (It) and el calamari (Sp) all translate as squid. It’s true that calamari on menus invariably seems to be deep fried squid in rings but whether cooked or swimming in the sea, it’s still seafood so I’ve no problem with it.
I enjoyed the return of Mudd and think I liked CATAPULT and DING DONG best. I remember struggling to parse PRIMACY so thanks to Pete and our setter.
Thanks, Mudd and Pete. I echo the positive sentiments, this was most enjoyable.
As I understand it, calamari doesn’t refer to a specific dish but to squid as an ingredient, so the “edible” qualifier in the definition makes it ok, I think. My local anglo-tapas joint has calamari a number of ways on the menu, all of them delicious.
Thanks Mudd and Pete
15ac and 21ac: For each of these I took the definition as just the first word, the second word being part of the “hidden” indicator.
20ac: Nice to see an old friend reappearing. I can remember a time when “flower” for “river” was so common in crosswords that using it to mean “plant” actually had some deceptive value.
I think if you miss a sitter you miss a certain goal which may or may not be a winner. For me, CALAMARI are plural. [ derived from a Greek word for pen, one dictionary says that’s the shape of the internal shell, another from the fact that they squirt ink] I agree with P B@5 about 15ac and 21 ac and with all those who found this fun.
Thanks Mudd and Pete. SARDINES, ISOLDE, STEAMY, and FLAT OUT were my top choices. I failed with EMULATE (didn’t get the Monty Python bit) and PRIMACY (never heard of pacy), and I didn’t fully understand SITTER. All CALAMARI is squid but not all squid is CALAMARI — some of it is used for bait. As Widdersbel @4 pointed out “edible” makes the clue OK for me. Thanks Pete for the blog.
Mostly straightforward but we thought it was going to be a DNF till we got PRIMACY and realised that ‘kill’ was the definition giving us EXECUTE and th crossing OXBRIDGE as our LOI. Favourite was CATAPULT.
Thanks, Mudd and Pete.
I have corrected 15 and 21. Thank you Pelham and Petert. My brain must have been out to lunch when I did those!
Late to the party but glad Mudd is back as I can finish his puzzles sometimes, like this one. Favourite and first in was SARDINES.