In contrast to my usual method of solving Azed over Sunday breakfast, I did this one intermittently while on a walking holiday on Scotland, so it’s hard to tell how its difficulty compares with the norm. After writing this up on Saturday evening, I’ve concluded it must have been a fairly hard one, as there are quite a lot of unfamiliar words in the answers, and some obscure definitions even of familiar words. All impeccably clued as usual, though: thanks to Azed.
| Across | ||||||||
| 2. | FIRST-ATTACK | Pre-emptively raiding timber pile, one dry within (11) A T[ee]T[otal] in FIR (timber) STACK – same concept as “first-strike” |
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| 10. | MESETA | Plateau thrilled mates going round Spain (6) E in MATES – diminutive of the more familiar Mesa, meaning a steep flat-topped mountain, ultimately from Latin “mensa” = table |
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| 11. | ZARNEC | E.g. orpiment from NZ, mined with care (6) (NZ CARE)* |
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| 13. | PLAFOND | River turns entering artificial lake – bridge now abandoned? (7) Reverse of FAL in POND. Chambers says that a pond is “usually artificial”, which hadn’t occurred to me before. I knew plafond as French for ceiling (confusingly not floor, as it sounds rather like “platform”), but it’s also the name of an early (“abandoned”) version of the game of Bridge |
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| 14. | ASBO | Court order: one like this restricts onset of bullying (4) B[ullying] in A SO – acronym for AntiSocial Behaviour Order, now obsolete as they were replaced in 2014 |
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| 15. | SATEEN | Glossy fabric lending special allure to one at secondary school? (6) S[ex] A[ppeal] + TEEN |
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| 16. | SIFREI | Law scrolls: one falling in fire’s ruined (6) I in FIRES* |
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| 18. | HILUS | Anatomical opening, vaguely bluish, seeping a bit of blood (5) Anagram of BLUISH, less B[lood] |
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| 20. | CERAMIST | Potter etc with arrangement round Chinese plants (8) RAMIS in ETC* – the Rami is a plant of the nettle family, used in fabrics |
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| 21. | INTERSEX | In short, an unknown quantity, neither one nor the other (8) IN + TERSE (short) + X |
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| 26. | OUTRÉ | Fantastic course shows leader slipping to fourth place (5) ROUTE, with the R moved to fourth place |
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| 27. | SHIVER | Cold sore for a spell (6) Two rather obscure definitions – a cold sore (Scots dialect); and a splinter, which is also a definition of “spell” |
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| 29. | NGUNIS | Bantu speakers back at home with gnus wandering round (6) Reverse of IN in GNUS* |
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| 31. | SOON | Boy embraces love willingly (4) O in SON |
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| 32. | FISTULA | Narrow opening is piercing rocky fault (7) IS in FAULT* |
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| 33. | DETAIN | Get out onto platform, but missing right stop (6) DETRAIN less R |
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| 34. | STROUT | Bulge indicating large corporation round one’s middle (6) R (middle letter of corpoRation) in STOUT (having a large corporation) |
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| 35. | STERNSHEETS | What’ll separate rowers from back end? Hard frames with man in (11) HE in STERN (hard) SETS. “Set” famously has a very large number of meanings: “frame” is one of them |
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| Down | ||||||||
| 1. | IMPASSIONED | Ardent male advance between two singles, one on date (11) M[ale] PASS (advance) in I I, +ONE D |
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| 2. | FELSIC | Describing fine mosaic rock, ‘turned off-colour’, we hear (6) Homophone of “fell sick” |
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| 3. | REFORM | Whistler ‘Golden Maiden’ getting a make-over? (6) REF (referee, who might blow a whistle) + OR + M |
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| 4. | STOKE | Some additions to kerosene as fuel (5) Hidden in additionS TO KErosene |
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| 5. | TANGIEST | Creatures clad in seaweed, with time extremely pungent (8) TANGIES (“Orcadian water spirit[s], appearing as a seahorse, or man covered in seaweed”) + T |
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| 6. | TAIAHA | Ceremonial staff, one from Siam (as was) – how nice! (6) TAI (variant as “Thai”) + AHA |
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| 7. | TROT | Old granny providing crib for toddler? (4) More obscure definitions: three this time: “old woman, crone”, “crib” and “a toddling child” |
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| 8. | ANGELIC | Perfect glance going wrong, one getting caught (7) I in GLANCE* |
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| 9. | CEREUS | Coat in wax American cactus? Rescue works (6) Two lots of wordplay: CERE (coat in wax)+ US; and RESCUE*, with the definition in the middle |
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| 12. | CONSTERNATE | Tricks in groups of three are daunting (11) CONS + TERNATE – not a familiar word, but obviously related to “consternation” |
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| 17. | FRESHISH | Fairly new rule he’s infringed cutting angle (8) R HES* in FISH (to angle) |
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| 19. | ATTUITE | Have a distinct feeling about lawyer in brief really losing head (7) ATT[orney] + [Q]UITE |
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| 22. | NUGGET | Raised pistol to catch something small but valuable (6) Reverse of GUN + GET |
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| 23. | REIN IN | Retaining base, king twice in check (6, 2 words) E (Euler’s number, base of natural logarithms) in R + twice IN – hard=near in the sense of “stingy” |
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| 24. | BISTRE | Pigment that’s brown or black turning livid round stone (6) B[lack] + ST in IRE (“turning livid” -not sure about this, but I can just about believe it). Chambers labels the “extremely angry” definition of “livid” as “informal”, which I find surprising as this is probably now its most common meaning |
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| 25. | AEOLUS | Thessalian ruler, jealous when roused, without justice (6) JEALOUS* less J. There are several mythological characters called Aeolus – the ruler of Thessaly is (I think) this one – not the keeper of the winds who gave his name to the Aeolian mode and harp |
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| 28. | HASTE | Enjoys a cuppa when one’s knocked off? More of it slows you down! (5) HAS TE[A] – “more haste less speed” |
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| 30. | NEAR | Hard left when driving in UK (4) Double definition – the left is the near side in the UK |
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24d
I had no problem with anger (noun)= ire = turning livid
I also found this one quite a bit more of a challenge than recent puzzles, especially getting a foothold.
34ac
Is it a coincidence that ‘large’ and ‘corporation’ both have ‘R’s in the middle? You can put either one’s middle into ‘STOUT’
Norman @3: I agree, “one’s” could refer to either, although at first blush I was looking for a word containing the letter “N”. Like you and Andrew I found this harder than usual, although mitigated as always by the generous checking.