Financial Times 18,096 by MONK

Thanks to Monk for this morning’s crossword.

A slightly tricky one from Monk this morning. I was sure it would be a pangram but alas, no J or Z. Nevertheless, Monk kept me on my toes and there was plenty to like.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Cancelled case for internship in a day (5)
WIPED

I[nternshi]P (case for) in WED (a day)

4. Russian empresses in a western prison patrolled by tense crack troops (9)
TSARITSAS

(A + STIR< (prison, <western)) patrolled by T (tense) + SAS (crack troops)

9. Heather, not initially, scoffs too much cheese (7)
RICOTTA

[e]RICA (heather, not initially) scoffs OTT (too much)
OTT= over the top

10. Bishop converted a very evil slimy creature (7)
BIVALVE

B (bishop) + (A V (very) EVIL)* (*converted)

11. Male lover promptly joins naked speaker (9)
INAMORATO

IN A MO (promptly) joins [o]RATO[r] (speaker, naked)

12. Spell ‘just in time’ partially (5)
STINT

[ju]ST IN T[ime] (partially)

13. Mistake in quote picked up after several deliveries (9)
OVERSIGHT

“CITE” (quote, “picked up”) after OVER (several deliveries, cricketing term)

15. Brass-section’s sound lacking a vitality (5)
OOMPH

OOMP[a]H (brass section’s sound, lacking A)

17. Wretch back in town introduced to benefit (5)
SNAKE

[tow]N (back in) introduced to SAKE (benefit)

19. Interrupting all others, one’s setter’s impervious to external influences? (9)
RESISTIVE

Interrupting REST (all others): I’S (one’s) + I’VE (setter’s)

21. Scottish engineer blocked by unknown English architect (5)
WYATT

WATT (Scottish engineer) blocked by Y (unknown)

22. Daily question precedes broadcast audition (9)
QUOTIDIAN

Q (question) precedes AUDITION* (*broadcast)

24. Cactus from Iowa put on old flat-bottomed boat (7)
OPUNTIA

IA (Iowa) put on O (old) + PUNT (flat-bottomed boat)
Opuntia is a prickly pear

25. Charming new lily I’d seen by cape (7)
IDYLLIC

(LILY I’D)* (*new) by C (cape)

26. Fine, off-and-on intense, singular port (9)
SHEERNESS

SHEER (fine) + [i]N[t]E[n]S[e] (off-and-on) + S (singular)

27. Dangerous weather on Ireland backing (5)
RISKY

SKY (weather) on IR< (Ireland, <backing)

DOWN
1. Those enduring conflicting losses caution against operating system, no names given (3,6)
WAR WIDOWS

(WAR[n] (caution) against WI[n]DOWS (operating system)) (no N (names) given)

2. Choose to dispense with tool (7)
PICKAXE

PICK (choose) + AXE (to dispense with)

3. Doctor’s first dictation periodically lacking the same thing (5)
DITTO

D[octor] (‘s first) + [d]I[c]T[a]T[i]O[n] (periodically lacking)

4. Wind event up, culture having left in even London landmark? (9,6)
TRAFALGAR SQUARE

FART< (wind event, <up) + AGAR (culture) having L (left) in + SQUARE (even)

5. Fish, bream, stirs a hook that’s been cast (8,7)
ARBROATH SMOKIES

(BREAM STIRS A HOOK)* (*that’s been cast)
A Scottish delicacy

6. Attacks fruitlessly, appeal for help being interspersed as late as possible? (9)
INVASIONS

IN VAIN (fruitlessly); SOS (appeal for help) being interspersed as late as possible

7. Focus on number one mischief-maker ousting church in religious breach (7)
SELFISM

ELF (mischief maker) ousting CH (church) in S[ch]ISM (religious breach)

8. Brushed son greeted north of the border (5)
SWEPT

S (son) + WEPT (greeted north of the border)
In Scotland, ‘to greet’ is more commonly understood as ‘to cry’

14. Protects a criminal witness (9)
SPECTATOR

(PROTECTS A)* (*criminal)

16. Furore in duchy near Barking (3,3,3)
HUE AND CRY

(DUCHY NEAR)* (*barking)

18. Usually beer served round most of Salisbury (2,1,4)
AS A RULE

ALE (beer) served round SARU[m] (Salisbury, most of)

20. Old British pharma company held up by hints, essentially missing winter features? (7)
ICICLES

ICI (old British pharma company) held up by CL[u]ES (hints, essentially missing)

21. Famous name in golf clubs (5)
WOODS

Double definition

23. Contents of diary covering two years and a month for some (5)
IYYAR

[d]IAR[y] (contents of) covering Y+Y (two years)
Iyyar is one of the months in the Jewish calendar

15 comments on “Financial Times 18,096 by MONK”

  1. Oriel–unless I’m missing something your parsing of 4A doesn’t work,; you only have eight letters. Perhaps the troops should be SAS. I assume “crack” is the anagram indicator and in this case may be going double duty.

  2. Thanks Jay – you’re quite right. It should be SAS – Special Air Service. I’ll amend the blog. It is not an anagram however. The indicator is ‘patrolled’ in the sense of ‘going around the perimeter’.

  3. {A + STIR (prison) reversed (western)} inside (patrolled by) {T (tense) + SAS (crack troops)}

    Not an easy grid. Nod to Jay@1.

  4. I was determined to complete this — and even got such obscurities as OPUNTIA & IYYAR — but before long I realised that there were too many clues requiring UK knowledge. Maybe next time …

  5. OPUNTIA , SELFISM and IYYAR were jorums for me today. You should have persisted GDU as you had solved the trickiest clues.

  6. Found it tough to an extent. Good puzzle. Liked TSARITSAS, WAR WIDOWS, INVASIONS (a novel WP) and ICICLES.
    Thanks Monk.
    Excellent blog. Thanks Oriel.

  7. I enjoyed this – only coming up short on a handful – I could parse IYYAR and ARBROATH SMOKIES but never heard of it/them before. OPUNTIA was beyond me but on the whole this was fun and not too much convoluted thinking required..

  8. There were too many unknown words for me to say I enjoyed this puzzle, but I managed to complete, so the clueing must be fair.
    23(d), IYYAR, I thought was IYAR, but since it’s a translation, I suppose both spellings might be valid.
    It’s a tough solve, but the setter used a friendly grid layout, and crossers from the easier clues helped greatly.
    Skilful setting, but satisfying to complete rather than entertaining.
    Thanks, Monk & Oriel

  9. Thanks Monk and Oriel

    23dn: Collins 2023 p 1038 has Iyar or Iyyar; Chambers 2016 p 812, ODE 2010 p 931, and SOED 2007 p 1446 have only Iyyar.

  10. So a tsarina can be called a TSARITA, and they can come in pairs! And WATT’s an engineer and WYATT’s an architect? Good to know! And IYYAR is the name of a month? ARBROATH SMOKIES is a fish, is it? I see, then INAMORATO is a lover. And weather is sky? I see. Everyone knows OPUNTIA is a cactus, and how did it take me time to come up with SHEERNESS – a port I have travelled through so often? And now I know Sarum pertains to the order of divine service in the Salisbury diocese from 11th c until the reformation, I will slip the word into conversation. I could go on…

    …. I did finish with lots of guessing and googling. Liked WIPED, SPECTATOR, HUE AND CRY

    Thanks Monk and Oriel

  11. Thanks Monk for the challenge. I failed with the nho 5d despite having all the crossers & the remaining letters of the anagram fodder. I couldn’t fully parse TRAFALGAR SQUARE, TSARITSAS, or ICICLES. I did enjoy many of the clues including RICOTTA, WYATT, QUOTIDIAN, SPECTATOR, AS A RULE, and WOODS. Thanks Oriel for the blog.

  12. James Watt (21a) was one of the Scots who invented the modern world. With the smoked herring at 8d and the teary greeting at 6d, there was a nice Scottish tone to this puzzle. (And Islay with its 10 whisky distilleries is about as IDYLLIC as you can get.)

    My COD (not smoked) was 1d WAR WIDOWS, for the clever subtractions in a great surface.

    Thanks Monk and Oriel for the fun.

  13. I got more of this than I deserved to simply by believing what the cluing told me like OPUNTIA, WYATT and IYYAR. But there was enough that I never heard of that it was not going to work like ARBORATH. Ah well. Still had fun! Thank you All.

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