Independent on Sunday 1,443 by Peter

Traditional Sunday fare from the Independent.  A roast and two veg crossword, nothing fancy but fits the occasion perfectly. Thank you to Peter.

completed grid
Across
1 INDICES Hands pointing to text in square after cubes (7)
IN then S (Square) following DICE (cubes)
5 PYRAMID Ancient building may drip fluid (7)
anagram (fluid) of MAY DRIP
9 GROOM Grand space for curry? (5)
G (grand) and ROOM (space)
10 ICELANDER European slipping spirit into fermented cider (9)
ELAN (spirit) inside (slipping into) anagram (fermented) of CIDER
11 SUSPENSION Head of state visiting America given funds for stay (10)
State (head of, first letter) with US (America) with PENSION (funds)
12 SEWN Old nurse squeezing opening of wound to be stitched (4)
SEN (State Enrolled Nurse, former qualification) contains (squeezing) Wound (opening letter of)
14 SHAKESPEARE Writer drinks fruit smoothie at last (11)
SHAKES (drinks) PEAR (fruit) then smoothiE (last letter of)
18 KILIMANJARO Brief dispatch by independent fellow before clash on old mountain (11)
KILL (dispatch) missing last letter (brief) then I (independent) MAN (fellow) JAR (clash) on O (old)
21 PIED Colourful mixed type (4)
double definition.  I always thought pied meant patched rather than colourful, indicating the presence of patches rather than the presence of colours.
22 ASSESSMENT Blockheads dispatched to take first part of maths test (10)
ASSES (blockheads) SENT (dispatched) containing (to take) Maths (first letter, first part of)
25 ARMADILLO Animal and a plant enveloped by strange aroma (9)
DILL (plant) in anagram (strange) of AROMA
26 LEVEL Uniform that’s reversible? (5)
LEVEL, a palindrome (reversible)
27 KENNEDY Clue about points awarded to Democratic president (7)
KEY (clue) containing (about) N NE (points of the compass) with (awarded to) D (democratic
28 EPSILON Letter from Poles in translation (7)
anagram (translation) of POLES IN
Down
1 INGEST Swallow nesting in charming estuary (6)
found inside (nesting in) charmING ESTuary
2 DROPSY Medic leading operation on extremely squidgy swelling (6)
DR (medic) then OP (operation) in SqudgY (extreme letters of)
3 CUMBERSOME Come across mineral with spiky tip that’s awkward to handle (10)
COME containing (across) UMBER (mineral) with Spiky (tip, first letter of)
4 SHIPS Small fruit on small vessels (5)
S (small) HIP (fruit) in S (small)
5 PHENOMENA Heads of physics turned sea creature into remarkable things (9)
PHysics (heads of, first two letters) then ANEMONE (sea creature) reversed (turned)
6 READ Bachelor leaving food in study (4)
bREAD (food) missing B (bachelor)
7 MEDIEVAL Very old stamp given to five tucking into food (8)
DIE (stamp) with V (five) inside MEAL (food)
8 DERANGED Cuckoo seen in borders of desolate wild garden (8)
DesolatE (borders, outside letters of) the anagram (wild) of GARDEN
13 EPSOM SALTS Purgatives sorted out males with spots (5,5)
anagram (sorted out) of MALES with SPOTS
15 AUNT SALLY Target for abuse torments topless partner (4,5)
tAUNTS (torments, topless) then ALLY (partner)
16 SKIPJACK Fish with small sharp extremity almost turned on sailor (8)
S (small) PIKe (sharp extremity, almost) reversed (turned) on JACK (sailor)
17 ALDERMAN Suspect alarmed by new public official (8)
anagram (suspect) of ALARMED then N (new)
19 WEEVIL Whale gutted by nasty insect (6)
WhalE (gutted, no middle letters) then EVIL (nasty)
20 STOLEN Lecturer stopping scruffy notes being plagiarised (6)
L (lecturer) inside anagram (scruffy) of NOTES
23 EMOTE English book about a way to show one’s feelings (5)
E (English) then TOME (book) reversed (about)
24 IDLE Lazy brother abandoning check (4)
brIDLE (check) missing (abandoned by) BR (brother)

definitions are underlined

I write these posts to help people get started with cryptic crosswords.  If there is something here you do not understand ask a question; there are probably others wondering the same thing.

5 comments on “Independent on Sunday 1,443 by Peter”

  1. Might have been half asleep, but after going through A clues initially had almost nothing. After that, rapidly fell into place.

    21A Think “Pied Piper of Hamlin” – I think his multicoloured garb may have been one of his attractions.

    22A It is just DILL in AROMA* – can understand the typo as as the indefinite article seems unnecessary, clue would have read OK without it.

    24D had to be IDLE, though I couldn’t think, or didn’t bother to try to work out, from what word the “b” or “br” or “bro” had been dropped.

    Thanks to Peter and PeeDee.

  2. gwep – you are kind to describe 22A as a typo but it is in fact my parsing mistake. I took a glance at A DILL and AROMA and assumed it was going to be an anagram of ARMADILLO. I should check.

  3. Enjoyable easy-end crossword, though I did slow up a bit in the SW. Fave was 10a, natch, so thanks to God’s Bouncer for the pleasant Sunday puzz and to P of the D for the blog.

  4. Just hit the right note for a Sunday solve – gentle and enjoyable.
    Wondered briefly whether I would have been right first time with the spelling of 18a without the wordplay!

    Top two for me were 5&13d.

    Thanks to Peter and to Peedee for the blog.
    By the way, Peter, I understand that you are a member of our ‘gentle’ sex – is your full name Petronella by any chance. I’ve always thought that is a lovely name.

  5. A nice gentle steady solve, though we hesitated about PIED, thinking it means simply black and white, as in ‘pied wagtail’ – we’d forgotten the Pied Piper dressed, according to Browning, in red and yellow. We did wonder if there was such a word as PYET (an anagram of ‘type’) – and found it in Chambers as a variant of a Scots word ‘pyot’ which – surprise, surprise – means PIED!

    For the rest, all very good so no real favourites.

    Thanks, Peter and PeeDee.

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