AZED 2,337

A straightforward plain after last week’s Carte Blanche.

I found this puzzle fairly straightforward to solve, with no obscure Scottish words for a change.  Indeed, I couid only find one dialect word (15 across).  I wondered about the anagram indicator at 12 down; is it a breach of Azed’s (self-imposed) rule never to use a noun anagram indicator?  Other than that, nothing to add except my continued thanks to Azed for forty five years of puzzles: long may he continue to set!

completed grid
Across
1 SEPS Ladder, second missed? Here’s horrid old snake (4)
S(t)EPS.  Chambers says it can refer to a “very venomous snake mentioned by classical writers” but I confess that it was new to me.
4 GOSSYPOL Yard in Glossop converted for cottonseed extract (8)
Y in *GLOSSOP.
10 EGOTRIPPER Cockney’s false claim about Victorian murder investigator, a self-aggrandiser? (10)
Could be written as “‘e got Ripper”.  And that must be a false claim because nobody was ever convicted of the Ripper murders.
11 ABROAD Sailor travelling in foreign parts (6)
AB ROAD.  The eleventh sense of road in Chambers is “travelling, tour”.
13 HOOTS Reverse of silence, also included loud laughter? (5)
TOO in SH (all rev).
15 REMBLE Quake, not the first, making Geordie move out? (6)
(T)REMBLE.
16 STOPGO South African country admits little positive in hesitant policy (6)
S, P in TOGO.  Of course Togo is a West African country; the South was a clever piece of misdirection.
17 GUAM Pacific island one introduced to eucalyptus (4)
A in GUM.
19 TUBERCLED Having small swellings cut, bleed badly round centre of perforation (9)
(perfo)R(ration) in *(CUT BLEED).
21 SOCIOPATH One seriously disturbed? Coop is wrong in place of hospital (9)
*(COOP IS) AT H.
24 RIMU Heads for refuge in monsoon under conifer (4)
Initital letters of Refuge In Monsoon Under.  It’s a New Zealand tree.
25 STUDIO Macho man with ‘Whoopee!’ joined film company (6)
STUD, IO.
27 SNIPER Control’s back, seizing power one picks off the unwary (6)
P in REINS (rev).
29 CALID Warm or cold, requiring a hat (5)
C A LID.
30 JUDOGI After party in prison I’ll be seen in sporting get-up (6)
DO in JUG, I.  As the name suggests, it’s the costume worn by those who practise judo.
31 ERGOPHOBIA Hating hard work? So pub’ll have charm (10)
ERGO, PH, OBIA.  It may be worth pointing out that obia is an obsolete version of the fetish or charm usually spelled obi.  For another type of obi, see 26 down.
32 BEDRESTS Requests doctor replacing hospital for confinements (8)
DR for H in BEHESTS.
33 GINS Hard drinks? Try some oulong instead (4)
Hidden in “oulong instead”.
Down
1 SEAMSTER Sewer, a mess when it’s burst, to soak up (8)
*(A MESS), RET (rev).  Nothing to do with drains.
2 PORNO Small number after soft or hard stuff? (5)
P OR NO.
3 STOOPE Old bucket, mostly bent (6)
STOOPE(d).
4 GRAD Riotous rag before degree? One probably avoided that (4)
*RAG, D.  I think that this qualifies as a semi-& lit, as the last four words comprise the definition but only make sense by reference to the rest of the clue.
5 SPIRALIST One that’s ambitious furled spritsail (9)
*SPRITSAIL.
6 SPHENE Rock king replaced by name in field of activity (6)
N for R in SPHERE.  It’s otherwise known as titanite.
7 PROBUS Upmarket retirement association favouring public transport (6)
It’s a contraction of Professional and Business, so nothing to do with buses.
8 OUTLASTING Surviving excursion with cargo on board (10)
LAST (which can mean cargo) in OUTING.
9 LYSE Break down ‘alternative facts’ de nos jours, we hear (4)
Sounds like “lies”.  A topical reference.
12 BITUMINATE A minute bit in mixture to prepare as road surface? (10)
*(A MINUTE BIT).  Isn’t this a noun anagram indicator?  Or does the use of “in” make a difference?  “Dolly mixture” to mean an anagram of dolly is one of the examples given (to illustrate its unsoundness) in Azed’s book A-Z of Crosswords.
14 SOCCEROOS Aussie footballers score O so freely (about 100) (9)
C in *(SCORE O SO).  Luckily I knew this term and was pleasantly surprised to see that it is to be found in Chambers.
18 MAHONIAS Members of barberry family: chap circling house is holding one (8)
HO in MAN, A in IS.
20 SMILED Not on the right track? Third taking lead looked pleased (6)
MISLED with the third letter moved to the front.  As a child, reading the word in books, I assumed that there must be a verb to misle of which this was the past tense, and pronounced it accordingly.
22 ON EDGE Tense person departs, say when climbing (6, 2 words)
ONE D(eparts) EG(rev).
23 PUG DOG Crufts entry maybe turned up good and clean, with grand following (6, 2 words)
UP (rev) G(ood) DO G(rand).  “Clean” here is used as a synonym for “do”.  Another topical clue, Crufts having taken place earlier this month.
26 DHOBI Laundryman in Frankfurt that is given sash (5)
D(as) H(eisst) (German for that is), OBI (this time not meaning a charm but a sash worn with a kimono).
27 SCAB Holder of weapon that’s slashed bard – here’s mark of earlier wound (4)
SCAB(bard).
28 PUHS Signs of dismissal of old, as ‘Push off!’ (4)
*PUSH.

*anagram

5 comments on “AZED 2,337”

  1. As I understand it, Azed’s point is that standalone nouns are unsatisfactory as anagram indicators, but nouns used with certain prepositions are OK. “In (a)mixture” and “mixture of” both suggest something has been made into a mixture, but the word “mixture” on its own does not. On those terms 12 is sound.

    I remember reading somewhere that Ximenes made an exception for certain common phrases such as “gin cocktail” for ING due to the phrase meaning “cocktail of gin”.

    Nice puzzle which was relatively gentle.

  2. Thanks, cruciverbophile, that’s what I suspected; it’s just that in his book (A-Z of Crosswords) he doesn’t make it clear that he’s referring only to standalone nouns.

  3. A gentle outing from Azed, NW corner last to fall. I don’t seem to have had any troubles parsing anything, which is always a sign that Azed’s in a benign mood.

  4. Yes – very easy!
    If I hadn’t misremembered the ending of gossypol (I had gossoply) and had got judo/gi instead of juod/ki (latter should be judo/ka for someone that does judo…), I would have completed it in about 40 mins (starting at about 00.05 on Tuesday morning) without the aid of a dictionary!
    No idea where I dredged up goss**** from – it was probably another crossword.

  5. BTW Bridgesong, there’s an extra ‘r’ in your parsing of 19 across – it should be (perfo)R(ation)

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