Weekend puzzle from the FT of March 25, 2023
I believe this is the most challenging puzzle yet from Rosa. It includes two words that are new to me, WEEDICIDE and DEMONYM. I believe I have come across URTICATION before but it did not spring to mind when I needed it and I needed a pattern-matching tool to get it.
I noted a few interesting associations in the puzzle:
The leftmost column reads SWITCH ON AND OFF
Two clues involve nettles, 9 (WEEDICIDE) and 16 (URTICATION)
15 (OKLAHOMANS) is an example of 25 (DEMONYM)
ACROSS | ||
9 | WEEDICIDE |
Hearing setters settle way to kill nettles? (9)
|
Homophone (hearing) of “we decide” (setters settle). A ‘weedicide’, a new term for me, is what is more commonly called a weed-killer. | ||
10 | VILLA |
Property wrongfully seized by Victoria and Albert (5)
|
ILL (wrongfully) in (seized by) V and A | ||
11 | THRILLS |
Dipping right hand back into cash registers for kicks (7)
|
RH (right hand) backwards (back) in (into) TILLS (cash registers) | ||
12 | GARNISH |
Freely sharing parsley, perhaps (7)
|
Anagram (freely) of SHARING | ||
13 | HAD |
Conned Henry and Maud on a regular basis (3)
|
H (henry) + [m]A[u]D | ||
14 | GHOSTBUSTER |
Tax investigator and head of government entertain bankrupt royal (11)
|
G[overnment] + HOST (entertain) + BUST (bankrupt) + ER (royal)
Apparently some tax inspectors refer to themselves as ghostbusters. This is news to me! |
||
17 | OPERA |
Trollope rarely includes drama (5)
|
Hidden word (includes) | ||
18 | LIE |
Porky middles of old, hairy men (3)
|
[o]L[d] [ha]I[ry] [m]E[n] | ||
19 | TRIPE |
Ultimately not ready to eat offal (5)
|
[no]T + RIPE (ready to eat) | ||
21 | ANAESTHETIC |
Number Ten cat: is he a stray? (11)
|
Anagram (stray) of TEN CAT IS HE A | ||
23 | PUB |
Retired, half-heartedly belch in boozer (3)
|
BU[r]P (half-heartedly belch) backwards (retired) | ||
25 | DEMONYM |
Familiar misrepresentation of my people’s name (7)
|
DEMON (familiar – in the supernatural sense) + anagram (misrepresentation) of MY. A demonym is a name given to people on the basis of where they live or come from. | ||
27 | DOTTIER |
Row after cook finally bought more crackers (7)
|
DO (cook) + [bough]T + TIER (row) | ||
28 | FERAL |
Wild time in Florida! (5)
|
ERA (time) in (in) FL (Florida) | ||
29 | NEW FOREST |
Bats of western National Park (3,6)
|
Anagram (bats) of OF WESTERN | ||
DOWN | ||
1 | SWITCH |
Small women long for change (6)
|
S (small) + W (women) + ITCH (long for) | ||
2 | BEGRUDGE |
Buggered off for stint (8)
|
Anagram (off) of BUGGERED | ||
3 | BILLYGOATS |
Gruff characters can tackle last of doubters (10)
|
BILLY (can) + GO AT (tackle) + [doubter]S | ||
4 | KISS |
Smack children, but not daughter and son (4)
|
KI[d]S (children but not daughter) + S (son) | ||
5 | WEIGHTIEST |
Most significant decade in inane West (10)
|
EIGHTIES (decade) in (in) W[es]T. I originally parsed this incorrectly, missing the significance of ‘inane’. | ||
6 | OVER |
Finished deliveries (4)
|
Double definition (with the second referring to cricket) | ||
7 | PLAINT |
Isn’t commonly oppressed by extremely pitiful accusation (6)
|
P[itifu]L + AINT (isn’t commonly) in (oppressed by) | ||
8 | WARHORSE |
Hears row about charger (8)
|
Anagram (about) of HEARS ROW | ||
15 | OKLAHOMANS |
Fine prince upset sultanate’s statesmen (10)
|
OK (fine) + HAL (prince) backwards (upset) + OMANS (sultanate’s) with a cryptic definition | ||
16 | URTICATION |
Stinging nettle in our attic (10)
|
Anagram (nettle) of IN OUR ATTIC. ‘Urtication’ is the sensation of being stung by nettles. | ||
17 | ON AND OFF |
Chap spilling seed in front of shed occasionally (2,3,3)
|
ONAN (chap spilling seed) + DOFF (shed) | ||
20 | IMPAIRED |
Spoilt, naughty child vented (8)
|
IMP (naughty child) + AIRED (vented) | ||
22 | ASMARA |
Paula’s marathon round African capital (6)
|
Hidden word (round) with a nod presumably to Paula Radcliffe. Asmara is the capital of Eritrea. | ||
24 | BERATE |
Losing connection, Bertie chewed carpet (6)
|
BER[tie] (bertie, losing connection) + ATE (chewed) | ||
26 | NULL |
Letter with lines signifying nothing (4)
|
NU (letter – Greek ‘n’ that is) + LL (lines) | ||
27 | DOWN |
Blue, fluffy hair (4)
|
Double definition |
Thanks Rosa and Pete
5dn: “inane” here means empty, so it is EIGHTIES in WT.
Pelham, Thank you. I made a mess of that one!
Thanks Rosa Klebb for a superb crossword. I agree with Pete that it was a bit more challenging but only BILLYGOATS required a word finder for me. (Billy=can is new to me.) I had many favourites as I always do with this setter; among them were FERAL, KISS, PLAINT, OKLAHOMANS, ON AND OFF (liked “chap spilling seed”), BERATE, TRIPE, and ANAESTHETIC, the latter two for their surfaces. Thanks Pete for the blog.
Agree this was on the difficult side. Agree also there were many fine clues. I share many on Tony’s list and add AMARA and BEGRUDGE.
Thanks Pete for unlocking a couple of mysteries. I could not parse ON AND OFF, LIE or GOAT – further indication this one was tough going. I was slightly disappointed that some of the difficulty sprang from the large number of new words.
But overall the number of great clues made up for any frustration. Thanks RK and thanks Pete.
Thank you Pete Maclean for GHOSTBUSTERS. I didn’t know either, and for Paula in ASMARA, and BERATE.
Had to look up URTICATION. Chuffed to get ON AND OFF from other crossies.
DOWN, PUB, SWITCH, NULL, LIE, TRIPE, BEGRUDGE, FERAL, ANAESTHETIC classic RK craft and humour. What a joy!
ANAESTHETIC was the stand out clue for me.
Thanks for the blog , great puzzle , Urticaria is nettle-rash so that helped me . Nice trick to see Number= ANAESTHETIC instead of the usual ether.
Good to see PDM in the FT blog, you can help Tony@3 with BILLY – Once a jolly swagman ……
I know urticaria as being all rashes including allergies, not just nettle rash [I regularly get urticatia all over when a washing powder/liquid changes their formulation so that went in relatively easily. It’s a real heartsink moment when whatever brand I’ve found as safe to use announces that it’s “new and improved”, because I have another hunt to find something I can use.]
Fun but tough puzzle. Thanks to Rosa Klebb and Pete Maclean.
Enjoyable as ever from this setter.
Demonym is a word I recognised but was last one in for us and needed checking. It seems to be of very recent coinage, and isn’t in the 2011 Chambers.
A very well-crafted puzzle. I didn’t get familiar = demon in 25a, but I knew the word DEMONYM, which as Andrew B noted (@9) is not in Chambers (not in the 2016 edition either).
I’ve seen number = anaesthetist quite recently, and it was nice to see the same ‘trick’ employed here in ANAESTHETIC.
Thanks to Rosa and Pete.
Could someone please explain why Demon means Familiar?
Brian it is witchcraft , a demon may take the form of a cat for example and be called a witch’s familiar.
Ah yes! Thank you Roz. I see now that it is mentioned in my dictionary but it was a new one on me.
Another lovely puzzle from Rosa – super clues, with witty and amusing surfaces throughout.
I did know DEMONYM and, like others, got URTICATION from urticaria. I’m in total sympathy with Shanne’s first paragraph @8.
I loved the ‘Gruff characters’, with happy memories of acting out the story of the three billygoats with children and grandchildren at Foxton Locks, with my husband being the troll and singing the song under the bridge.
The clue for NULL recalled Macbeth’s ‘tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury …’
A real delight – many thanks, Rosa and Pete.
We found this fairly straightforward, the only problems being with WEEDICIDE, URTICATION and DEMONYM; the first two were easily checked in Chambers but having worked out DEMONYM we had to google to discover that it is a real word.
GHOSTBUSTER is in Chambers (2014), with one definition being ‘an employee of the Inland Revenue responsible for detecting people who have not paid tax on their incomes.’
Favourites were ANAESTHETIC and BILLYGOATS.
Thanks, Rosa and Pete
Delightful, thank you Rosa and Pete too. Favourites here were the cheeky BEGRUDGE and ON AND OFF, closely followed by ANAESTHETIC. Last and trickiest were GHOSTBUSTERS and BILLYGOATS, but all gettable.
Thank you all for commenting. It is unusual to get this number of comments. No doubt Rosa has much to do with this. Thank you, Rosa.
Pete – not sure if you’ve had a chance to check out this weekend’s April 1 Gozo puzzle yet but it seems like there’s a missing clue (unless that’s an intentional April Fools’ Day diversion?). Your thoughts would be most appreciated!
There is indeed a clue missing, in both the print and online editions, and I believe it must be a mistake. The clue should be for 30 and, with all the crossers, there is only one likely answer.
Thanks. That is very helpful. If it is 30ac I can think of 2 answers