Financial Times 17,612 by IO

A tricky puzzle from IO this morning.

Not that we should expect anything less, of course! There are a couple of solutions where I’m definitely missing a nuance or other meaning – do enlighten us all in the comments if you have further input. Many thanks to IO for a clever and challenging puzzle. Plenty to enjoy.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1/9. Tripe and cobblers: prep’s done for King Charles’s dinner? (3,3,3,2,8)
THE DOG ATE MY HOMEWORK

Cryptic definition

‘Tripe’ and ‘cobblers’ can be be edible items, but also are both slang terms for ‘nonsense’. ‘Prep’ is a synonym for ‘homework’. ‘King Charles’ being a type of spaniel of course.

10. Did swine and duck as tattoos (6)
OINKED

O (duck) + INKED (as tattoos)

11. Reversing roles (not mine, not indelicate), prepare for a difficult passage (5,8,2)
STRAP YOURSELF IN

PARTS< (roles, <reversing) + YOURS (not mine) + ELFIN (not indelicate)

13. Album compilation some current prayer parts defraud (5,10)
STAMP COLLECTING

AMP (some current) + COLLECT (prayer) parts STING (defraud)

17. Robber we hear not after ships, securing new way to raise funds (5,3,3,4)
BRING AND BUY SALE

BRIGAND (robber) + “BY SAIL” (ships, “we hear”) securing N (new)
Any ideas about the ‘not after’ bit?

18. Just underplays cryptic hint (6,3,6)
PURELY AND SIMPLY

(UNDERPLAYS)* (*cryptic) + IMPLY (hint)

22. Arrange to take Doodlebug back over again? (2,4)
DE NOVO

DO (arrange) to take V-ONE< (Doodlebug, <back)

23/24. In case of which pap makes unscheduled appearance? (8,11)
WARDROBE MALFUNCTION

Cryptic definition

‘Pap’ meaning a woman’s nipple in this context

DOWN
2. What would be funny, doubling up about long laugher? (5)
HYENA

HA (what would be funny doubling up, i.e. HAHA) about YEN (long)

3. In Jersey Zoo, Durrell’s set up something outstanding (5)
DOOZY

[Jerse]Y ZOO D[urrell’s]< (in, <set up)

4 /23. Group of fine women taking on an expert in fashion (3,3)
GOK WAN

G (group) of OK (fine) + W (women) taking on AN

5. It’s in keeping with the bride to be faithful, so we hear (9)
TROUSSEAU

“TRUE SO” (to be faithful + SO, “we hear”)

6. Columns, not books etc, probing physical scale (9)
MONOLITHS

NO LIT (not books, etc) probing MOHS (physical scale)

MOHS is a hardness scale to measure resistance to scratching from 1 to 10

7. One may be represented by MC (4)
HOST

Cryptic definition

‘MC’ stands for Master of Ceremonies

8. Area’s premium beer keeps rocketing (8)
REGIONAL

(NO. 1 (premium), LAGER (beer) keeps)< (<rocketing)

12. Pretty dim, it leaving Red Sea port without cargo (7)
UNLADEN

UNL[it] (pretty dim, IT leaving) + ADEN (Red Sea port)

14. Heartless person bringing misery aboard conveyance equipped with rack? (8)
TORTURER

R[a]T (person bringing misery, heartless) aboard TOURER (conveyance equipped with rack? a roof-rack in this context) – &lit

The RACK is an old torture device

15. Incarcerating drunk men in a terrible state (9)

MINNESOTA

Incarcerating SOT (drunk), (MEN IN A)* (*terrible)

16. Unusual putting game ahead of the Barking Hotel? (5,4)
CRAZY GOLF

Cryptic definition

In the NATO alphabet you might get ‘crazy GOLF’ and then ‘barking HOTEL’

19. Something in the sea salt I almost forgot to write about (5)
SPRAT

(TAR (salt) + PS (I almost forgot to write))< (<about)

‘Tar’ and ‘salt’ are both colloquial terms for sailors

20. A plumber, “Iron Man”, repeatedly cut off supply (5)
MARIO

(IRO[n] MA[n])* (repeatedly cut off, *supply)

Mario is a plumber character in Super Mario Bros

21. Witness live projection (4)
LOBE

LO (witness) + BE (live)

24 comments on “Financial Times 17,612 by IO”

  1. KVa

    BRING AND BUY SALE
    Not after=BY, ships=SAIL (a vessel/a group of vessels: Collins)

  2. KVa

    CRAZY GOLF
    Should we read ‘Barking Hotel’ as ‘crazy H’? ‘crazy G/CRAZY GOLF’ is ahead of ‘crazy H’.
    Is that what Oriel is saying?

    Liked plenty of clues. Thoroughly enjoyed this Io puzzle. There is always a possibility of missing out an
    additional layer or two in an Io. Excellent blog Oriel! Thanks to both.

  3. FrankieG

    TROUSSEAU def = “It’s in keeping with the bride-to-be
    “TRUE SO” (faithful + SO, “we hear”)

  4. WordPlodder

    The usual very hard work for an Io puzzle. I’d never heard of GOK WAN, but thought I’d parsed the rest until seeing now that the parsing of BRING AND BUY SALE (new to me as a thing) and TORTURER had escaped me. I suppose ‘Did swine’ means mimicked a pig but this was another that went in with a shrug. Favourite was WARDROBE MALFUNCTION, having remembered the unusual sense of ‘pap’.

    Peter, a ‘cobbler’ is a sort of fruit pie; I think (I may be wrong) it’s mainly an American term.

    Satisfying to at least have filled the grid correctly, but I’ll need a few weeks to recover until Io next appears!

    Thanks to Oriel and Io

  5. Diane

    Peter@3
    Gok Wan is a British fashion consultant from Leicester who was best known for hosting a makeover TV show called How To Look Good Naked.

  6. FrankieG

    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/pap#Etymology_2
    ‘1 (archaic) A female breast or nipple. [from 13th c.] – 2 (now rare, archaic) A man’s breast. [from 15th c.] – 3 A rounded, nipple-like hill or peak.
    … Etymology 3 – Ellipsis of Pap smear. … (Etymology 5 – Clipping of paparazzo.)’
    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Pap_smear#English – ‘Etymology – From Papanikolaou. Named after Greek-American physician Georgios Papanikolaou’

  7. KVa

    OINKED
    I think …
    Did duck as tattoos=did O as tattoos
    O INKED.
    Not fully convinced.

    (Oriel! ‘as tattoos=INKED’…is this ok? I tried to parse it differently as I couldn’t understand this bit).

  8. crypticsue

    Tricky and enjoyable

    Thanks to Io and Oriel


  9. There are several hills in Scotland (and maybe elsewhere) with “pap” in their names, because of their supposed resemblance to breasts, e.g. the Pap of Glencoe and the Paps of Jura.

  10. Pelham Barton

    Thanks Io and Oriel

    1/9ac: Everyone’s friend rhyming slang makes an appearance here “cobblers’ awls” = balls, used either literally for male anatomy or metaphorically as rubbish.

  11. James

    Not too hard this time, but plenty to chew on.
    I think HOST must have a double meaning – perhaps MC for military cross being something that represents an army? Not sure, but the particular wording suggests there’s more.

  12. KVa

    HOST
    I think it applies to the one who is represented as well as the one who represent. Both are HOSTS.

  13. Roz

    Thanks for the blog, very good set of clues, perhaps some of the long answers made life easier for us.
    HOST I think the clue is just saying that MC is one example of a host, the cryptic deception being MC as Roman numerals which do not represent one.

  14. KVa

    Roz@17
    I have a different take. We can read the clue in two ways:
    One (aHOST/owner of the show)may be represented by an (emcee (one designated by the HOST).
    One (a HOST/emcee) may be represented by the abbreviation/letters M C.

  15. KVa

    ….by an emcee (one…..)*

    BRING ….SALE
    Just adding a bit:
    By 7 pm: Not after 7 pm.


  16. I took one meaning of MC to be 1100, which would be a large number or host of people.

  17. Undrell

    Mostly guesswork.. not sure if I’d read the blog first it would have helped me..
    Thanks Oriel n IO

  18. KVa

    Andrew@20
    That’s a better explanation, I feel.

  19. copmus

    Great blog-only finished this morning-never heard of GOK
    And forgot about super mario.
    But I did do a word search with only W and B and got wardrobe !!
    I think PAP may have been a very old slang for breast-dunno why
    Thanks

  20. Moly

    Congratulations to everyone who completed this. Way above my pay grade. Weirdly, I managed the last Io but this one completely defeated me.

  21. jvector

    Wow. Got through this but it took a few checks along the way.
    I entered STAMP COLLECTION at first: ‘collection’ seemed (still does seem, to me) to be a better match with ‘compilation’ than ‘collecting’ which doesn’t agree grammaticallly unless you view it as a gerund.
    Quite familiar with ‘paps’ in the Scottish sense so no problem there. Likewise, ‘lobe’ can apply to many types of projecting thing not just ears.
    The ‘nonsense’ sense of ‘Tripe and cobblers’ did not seem to have anything really to do with the answer for 1/9 so this seemed like a big stretch.
    Favourite clue PURELY AND SIMPLY, a fabulous bit of work.

  22. Pelham Barton

    13ac: stamp collecting is given as a noun phrase in all the usual dictionaries, as the name of a hobby. Having STING as the container in the wordplay should remove all ambiguity.

  23. Gazzh

    Late thanks Oriel for making sense of the heartless rat and for STAMP COLLECTING – not knowing the religious part, I was struggling there and indeed had the same error as jvector@25 until the REGIONAL light dawned. On the other hand I had no problem with “pap”, probably as it has occurred often enough in dubious fiction to have stuck. Have missed the last couple of Io’s and maybe that’s why my eyebrows reached new heights at times solving this one. But I always enjoy the test and the breadth of references, thanks Io.

  24. Gazzh

    PS I thought of a bike with rack (for panniers) being a tourer but am happy to believe it could apply to cars with roof-racks too.

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