A harder than usual plain puzzle this week, with some knowledge of both French and German of assistance.
With one clue entirely in French and one answer a French word (fainéant) as well as the German Bände and (A)bend, there was a distinct European theme to this puzzle (and I haven’t mentioned Dutch!). I particularly liked DROPSHOT, which was the first clue I solved. Does anyone think that it does in fact qualify as an & lit? I often find it difficult to decide whether a clue does meet the criteria.

Across | ||
1 | DWAAL | Start of wavering in pulse, showing state of confusion (5) |
W(avering) in DAAL. It’s a South African term. | ||
7 | BUAZE | African shrub: new growth I cut twice likewise (5) |
BU(d) and AZE(d). Also spelled BWAZI. | ||
11 | RANCHERIA | Herdsmen’s village spread, dear, reverse of ideal (9) |
RAN, CHER, AI(rev). | ||
12 | FAINEANT | Like puppet kings, not bright, including eastern one (8) |
E AN in FAINT. The Chambers definition is worth quoting in full: “Do-nothing, applied esp to the later Merovingian kings of France, mere puppets, whose mayors of the palace governed the country”. | ||
13 | PARDI | Le coeur de Gérard, veritablement! (5) |
The centre or heart of the name of the French actor Gérard Depardieu. It means assuredly in Spenser or Shakespearean usage, and derives from the Old French par dé, meaning by God. | ||
14 | DUTCH | The missus requiring endless deference, with small children (5) |
DUT(y) CH(ildren). Cockney slang for a wife, perhaps from Duchess of Fife. Best known, perhaps, from this music hall song. | ||
15 | SPYHOLE | Alone, nursing form of hyp – it gives one a squint (7) |
*HYP in SOLE. | ||
18 | HAZE | Rag involving jigs by the sound of it? (4) |
Sounds like HAYS or HEYS. This is the second meaning of “haze”, corresponding to the second meaning of “rag”. | ||
20 | OFF-PISTE | Avoiding regular runs, softie worked out with slices of frozen pizza (8) |
*(SOFTIE F P). | ||
21 | OCTAVIUS | Emperor in situ, endlessly vocal, deranged (8) |
*(SITU VOCA). | ||
23 | REEL | Merrymaking short of volume – drum required (4) |
RE(v)EL. | ||
25 | SLADANG | Wild ox blood youth swallowed (7) |
LAD in SANG. | ||
28 | BANDE | Number included among ordered journal volumes (5) |
N in BADE. Bände is a German word. | ||
29 | ULNAR | Bony part of beautiful narwhal (5) |
Hidden in “beautiful narwhal”. | ||
30 | ESPALIER | Pear lies off the wall – leaving this? (8) |
*(PEAR LIES). I’m not sure if this should qualify as an & lit clue; pear trees are often trained along an espalier against a wall. | ||
31 | CONSOCIES | Setback for lettuce devoured by rabbits – wherein one species dominates (9) |
COS (rev) in CONIES. | ||
32 | DATIN | Goin’ out with top ladies in KL? (5) |
A Datin is a female member of a senior chivalric order in Malaysia. I am not sure why the clue uses the plural. | ||
33 | WELDS | Firm joins league in mid-week? (5) |
L in WEDS. A beautifully misleading definition. | ||
Down | ||
1 | DROPSHOT | Murray speciality? Pro’s foxed, taken in by depth, skilful (8) |
*PROS in D HOT. This must be at least a semi-& lit, as the wordplay makes clear reference to the definition. Having said that, it’s notable that Andy Murray played almost no dropshots in his winning Wimbledon final this year, unlike the final of the French open; different surfaces and different opponents, I suppose. | ||
2 | WATAP | It’s used by Cree for weaving with thatching material (5) |
W ATAP. The leaves of the atap or attap palm are used for thatching. | ||
3 | ANGRY | Tall and thin, head lowered, looking threatening? (7) |
RANGY with the first letter dropped a few places. | ||
4 | ACIDHEAD | One in charge of investigations, maybe, a regular addict? (8) |
A CID HEAD. I’m not sure that “regular” adds much to the definition. | ||
5 | PEARLFISHING | Opera theme (not his) Elgar reworked with piano finish (12) |
*(ELGAR FINISH P). | ||
6 | PRIDEFULNESS | Extreme self-esteem strangely unfiled in newspapers (12) |
*UNFILED in PRESS. | ||
7 | BINDI | Dab of face paint, black, where it’s common, one removed (5) |
B INDI(a). | ||
8 | ABATIS | Barbed wire defence down? It’s put up inside (7) |
IT (rev) in À BAS. | ||
9 | ZINCITE | Deep red oxide (zero tar) (7) |
Z INCITE. This is an old usage of “tar”, defined in Chambers as “incite to fight”. | ||
10 | EATH | Poet’s simple (the end, not the beginning) (4) |
(d)EATH. Another Spenserian term. | ||
16 | BIRDLICE | Parasitic insects left trickle climbing over glaze (8) |
L DRIB (rev), ICE. | ||
17 | EELGRASS | Seawater plant, largesse when wrecked (8) |
* LARGESSE. | ||
19 | ACRASIA | Lack of will power making one increasingly gaga? So it’s said (7) |
Sounds like “a crazier”. | ||
22 | TINPOT | Paltry fool given a rise – a large sum (6) |
NIT (rev), POT. | ||
24 | FELON | Mugger attacked – only one pound taken (5) |
FEL(l) ON. Isn’t this a definition by example? | ||
26 | ANVIL | Bone a duck with very little stuffing (5) |
V in A NIL. | ||
27 | NAKED | Defenceless and trembling king end of knife’s penetrated (5) |
K (knif)E in *AND. | ||
28 | BEND | The Scots booze in Munich evening one’s taken off (4) |
(A)BEND. |
*anagram
28 across is a little naughty. The plural of German ‘Band’ is indeed ‘Bande’ with an umlaut on the letter a (which for some reason I can’t evoke in this window) and the German spelling rule requires the umlaut to be used in both upper and lower case. There is an alternative spelling ‘Baende’. And there can be no umlaut in the crossing solution ‘acrasia’!
It seems to me that there is a convention in crosswords that where a foreign word has an accent, then that accent is ignored in the entry in the grid and doesn’t appear in crossing entries. I’m sure I have seen things like this many times.
25 ac SLADANG Wild ox blood youth swallowed (7)
I have been thinking about this since I saw it on Sunday. Does this clue say what it means, or means what it says?
To me, this means putting SANG in LAD, not the other way around. I think the clue is not right.
Nick
Nick, I agree, although I confess to not having noticed the problem when solving the puzzle.
Read the clue for 25a aloud with a pause after “blood” and it works perfectly.
What Norman said, it would’ve been a bit of a give-away if there was a comma in the clue.