Independent 12,128 / Phi

This week’s set of puzzles comes to a normal end with Phi’s latest offering.

I found this one to be towards the top end of the difficulty spectrum for Phi in the Indy. I think that I have got there in the end, but not without a fair amount of head-scratching. The less usual entry at 1A didn’t help, given the large number of crossing entries, while 18 was completely new to me, I think.

My favourite clues today, essentially for smoothness of surface reading, were 8, 10, 13, 14, 29 and 30. 5 deserves a special mention for sheer flair, I feel.

*(…) indicates an anagram; definitions are italicised; // separates definitions in multiple-definition clues

Across  
   
01 PALIMPSEST Quick look initially forgotten, probing historic rewritten document

<g>LIMPSE (=quick look; “initially forgotten” means first letter is dropped) in PAST (=historic); a palimpsest is a manuscript in which old writing has been rubbed out to make room for new

   
06 HOLY Sacred and hitherto largely seen in extreme instances

H<ithert>O L<argel>Y; “seen in extreme instances” means first and last letters only are used

   
10 LUTON English town turned out to be within borders of London

*(OUT) in L<ondo>N (“borders of” means first and last letters only); “turned” is anagram indicator

   
11 ARMISTICE Live broadcast of cities accepting King’s truce

R (=king, i.e. rex) in [AM (= (I) live, exist) + *(CITIES)]; “broadcast of” is anagram indicator

   
12 TRICEPS Instant addition to communication shows muscles

TRICE (=instant, moment) + PS (=addition to communication, i.e. postscript)

   
13 PLACARD Notice vehicle impounded by LAPD at work

CAR (=vehicle) in *(LAPD); “at work” is anagram indicator

   
14 BLEEDING Book, topping charts in audio format, full of compassion

B (=book) + homophone (“in audio format”) of “leading (=topping charts)”; e.g. a bleeding heart is full of compassion

   
16 MOVING Poignant moment: victory in fighting at last

MO (=moment, as in a mo) + V (=victory, as in VJ Day this week) + IN + <fightin>G (“at last” means last letters only)

   
19 EAT OUT Each and every Parisian gets to visit a restaurant

EA (=each) + TOUT (=every Parisian, i.e. the French word for every, all)

   
21 LOVELIES Delightful examples: nothing is false here

LOVE (=nothing, i.e. zero score in tennis) + LIES (=is false, speaks untruthfully)

   
23 TOYSHOP Nonsense about variable work – here’s a source of play

[Y (=variable, in algebra) in TOSH (=nonsense, drivel)] + OP. (=work, of music, opus)

   
25 DIVORCE Very nasty creature brought in to finish legal separation

[V (=very) + ORC (=nasty creature)] in DIE (finish, come to an end)

   
27 OUTGROWTH Extra bit of plant mutated in Trough Two

*(TROUGH TWO); “mutated” is anagram indicator

   
28 INPUT Feed information to one crackpot seizing power

P (=power, in physics) in [I (=one) + NUT (=crackpot, crank)]

   
29 LONG Some wood, including Northern pine

N (=Northern) in LOG (=some wood); to pine is to long for, yearn

   
30 BROWN-NOSER Sycophant interrupting toasts with no hesitation

[NO in BROWNS (=toasts, e.g. bread, as verb here)] + ER (=hesitation)

   
Down  
   
01 PALATABLE Friend with a selection of food? It’s very tasty

PAL (=friend) + A + TABLE (=selection of food)

   
02 LATTICE Network behind schedule receiving reduced credit

TIC<k> (=credit; “reduced” means last letter is dropped) in LATE (=behind schedule)

   
03 MANSE Mother joining three for bridge in rectory?

MA (=mother) + N S E (=three for bridge, i.e. three of the four players, with only W missing)

   
04 SWANSONG Pale young man in G&S upset – last performance?

[WAN (=pale) + SON (=young man)] in SG (G(&)S; “upset” indicates vertical reversal)

   
05 SUM UP Recap more than half of music?

Cryptically, “sum” is more than half of the letters of “MUS<ic>, with “up” indicating a vertical reversal

   
07 ORIGAMI Handicraft engaging a million in the beginning? Not entirely

[A + M (=million)] in ORIGI<n> (=beginning; “not entirely” means last letter is dropped)

   
08 YIELD Produce that is left in yard

[I.E. (=that is, id est) + L (=left)] in YD (=yard, in addresses)

   
09 ESCALOPE Thin meat? Reduced quantity served during flight

LO<t> (=quantity, batch; “reduced” means last letter is dropped) in ESCAPE (=flight, fleeing)

   
15 DRUTHERS Dead routine for a woman? That’s the American preference

D (=dead) + RUT (=routine, as in to be in a rut) + HERS (=for a woman); “druthers” is a colloquial US word for choice, preference

   
17 GAS HEATER Consumer pursuing opening to get contribution to housewarming?

GASH (=opening, as in flesh) + EATER (=consumer); the “housewarming” of the definition refers not to parties but to heating properties!

   
18 ROADSHOW Staff’s methodology to secure area for promotional tour

A (=area) in [ROD (=staff, stick) + HOW (=methodology, as in to understand the how and why of …)]

   
20 TRY IT ON Dressmaker’s encouragement to be audacious?

Cryptically, a dressmaker would encourage the customer to try it (=the dress) on!

   
22 IRRUPTS Republican, beset by aggrieved purist, breaks in

R (=Republican) in *(PURIST); “aggrieved” is anagram indicator

   
23 TROLL Amount to pay to get around river goblin

R (=river) in TOLL (=amount to pay)

   
24 POWER Explosive with no d______ strength

(gun)POW<d>ER (=explosive; “with no d” means letter “d” is dropped)

   
26 V-SIGN Very bad act gathering good indication of approval?

V (=very) + [G (=good) in SIN (=bad act, transgression)]

   
   

 

12 comments on “Independent 12,128 / Phi”

  1. I had a vague memory of PALIMPSEST from studying Baudelaire in my youth. I constructed DRUTHERS from the wordplay and was pleasantly surprIsed to see it was a real word. Great puzzle.

  2. PeterT @1: “If I had my DRUTHERS” is the full phrase, derived from “I’d rather.” It’s sort of rustic and a bit dated, but yes, you still hear it.

  3. Did nobody else notice the quotation “love lies bleeding” (Wordsworth and Swinburne) at 21 across and 14 across?

  4. Stewart @5 – we had a positive 39th crossword from Pangakupu, Phi’s Guardian nom-de guerre, yesterday. I know love-lies-bleeding as a flower, not just a film and line from a poem.

    Thank you to Phi and RatkojaRiku

  5. Druthers seems beyond obscure, but all the rest ok. I assume there is a theme I don’t know or care about….

  6. Isn’t it odd how one person’s never heard off is another’s doesn’t everyone know that. I’ve long known PALIMPSEST and I remember being at a science fiction award ceremony where two items up for awards had the word in their titles. Unfortunately, the MC didn’t know how to pronounce it. Whereas, it took me ages to get LOVELIES.

  7. [I find it interesting that there’s a technical linguistic term to explain the origin of words like DRUTHERS: “metanalysis” — the mistaken (aural) apprehension of the boundary between words. “ewt” was the original term for the amphibian, so “an ewt” became “newt”. Likewise the Fool’s term of endearment for Lear: “Nuncle” from “mine uncle”.]

  8. If you move into the field of crime writing you get some gloomier vocab. No one seems to have noticed the toyshop…

  9. Ah, books by the English crime writer Edmund Crispin:
    HOLY Disorders
    The MOVING TOYSHOP
    SWAN SONG
    LOVE LIES BLEEDING
    The LONG DIVORCE
    The (G)[PA]LIMPSES[T] of the Moon
    Maybe others?

  10. To be fair, I hadn’t thought of g(limpses)! I just like the word PALIMPSEST.

    Edmund Crispin was aka Bruce Montgomery whose Carry On film music popped up a few weeks ago.

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