Financial Times 16,178 by NEO

A highly enjoyable Tuesday morning romp.

Loads to like and admire in this relatively brisk solve, all as it should be in a Tuesday FT. Plenty of quirky cryptic definitions, very readable surfaces and some clever constructions, GROUND (9a) being my clue-of-the-day. Exemplary stuff. Thanks, Neo.

completed grid
Across
1 HARDSHIP Is obliged to cross road in difficulty (8)
HAS (‘is obliged’) surrounds R[oa]D + HIP (trendy, ‘in’).
6 DIRECT Frank to call the shots (6)
Double definition.
9 GROUND Go for train? (6)
I.e., ‘give a grounding in’. GO might be clued as “G + ROUND (a circle, ‘O’)”.
10 NONSENSE Fool’s speech in production of Lear? (8)
Double def, Edward Lear being a producer of humorous ‘nonsense’ verse, w sneaky misdirection towards Shakespeare.
11 IDOL Hero from Left ending response in union ceremony (4)
L[eft] after ‘I DO’, said in wedding (‘union ceremony’).
12 ENID BLYTON Writer being weirdly tiny blonde (4,6)
Anagram (‘weirdly’) of TINY BLONDE.
14 SPECIOUS Son cherished? Not right, but superficially plausible (8)
S[on] + PrECIOUS (‘cherished’) without R[ight].
16 LOIN Meat from wild animal on the turn inside (4)
LION, with interior letters reversed.
18 EPEE Three Europeans holding power in sports event (4)
3xE[uropean] surrounds P[ower].
19 ALL-ROUND General resemblance to Humpty Dumpty? (3-5)
HD being traditionally depicted as egg-shaped.
21 GRIM REAPER One delivering curtains for you? (4,6)
Cryptic definition. Larson-esque image of Death carrying a roll of chintz  over his shoulder instead of the usual scythe.
22 FUME Iron-clad shell of uranium to give out gas (4)
FE (‘iron’) surrounds ‘shell’ of UraniuM.
24 FOUNTAIN Spurt from female ousting male in spectacular rise (8)
F[emale] replaces M[ale] in ‘mOUNTAIN’ (a ‘spectacular rise’).
26 INVENT Coin occupying hole (6)
I.e. IN VENT.
27 SKEWER Spit in the food? (6)
Rather tasteless cryptic def.
28 RETURNED Wind coming through grass reversed (8)
TURN (to ‘wind’) in REED (‘grass’).
Down
2 ACRID Parched, drinking cold bitter (5)
C[old] in ARID.
3 DOUBLE CREAM Dairy product best in two helpings? (6,5)
CREAM = ‘best’, so double that.
4 HEDGEHOG Hard border control is something prickly (8)
H[ard] + EDGE (‘border’) + HOG (aggressively to take ‘control’ of limelight, conversation, bedclothes &c).
5 PENCIL SHARPENER Writer’s device for emphasising point? (6,9)
Cryptic def.
6 DANUBE A U-bend unusual in river (6)
Anagram (‘unusual’) of A UBEND.
7 RYE Grain found regularly in Argyle (3)
Alternate letters of ‘aRgYlE’.
8 CUSTODIAN Count said to be disguised as caretaker (9)
Anagram (‘to be disguised’) of COUNT SAID.
13 YELLOW FEVER Outbreak of cowardice? (6,5)
Another CD.
15 PAPERWORK Daily grind in clerical occupation (9)
PAPER (‘daily’) + WORK (to ‘grind’, as in e.g. ‘work the crushed garlic into the sea-salt’) &lit, near as dammit.
17 ALARMIST One magnifies danger in local armistice (8)
Very nice inclusion in ‘locAL ARMISTice’.
20 REPAIR Theatre character in shape (6)
REP (‘theatre’) + AIR (‘character’).
23 MANSE Saint in shock comes to church property (5)
S[aint] in MANE (‘shock’ of hair).
25 NEW Novel from Irvine Welsh (3)
Appropriately hidden in ‘irviNE Welsh’.

*anagram

10 comments on “Financial Times 16,178 by NEO”

  1. WordPlodder

    GROUND was too good for me. Yes, very clever now it’s been explained. Note to self for the future: ‘Go’=G+ROUND

    I enjoyed the cryptic defs, even if the surface for SKEWER was a bit much!

    GRIM REAPER and the ‘weirdly tiny blonde’ for ENID BLYTON were my picks of the day.

    Thanks to Neo and Grant

  2. Niltac

    A DNF for me courtesy of REPAIR @ 20d, which I still can’t see. If someone could explain the context of REPAIR = shape I’d appreciate it. The only other one I couldn’t parse was GROUND, which in hindsight was one of Neo’s best.

    Thanks to Neo and Grant.

  3. Grant Baynham

    To Niltac:
    I think ‘repair’ and ‘shape’ are nouns, both meaning, roughly, ‘state’ or ‘condition’. By the good old substitution test, if something is ‘in good repair’, then it’s ‘in good shape’. That’s how I read it, anyway.

  4. crypticsue

    For the second time today, I’m going to agree with the prologue

    Thanks to Neo and Grant

  5. Niltac

    Thanks for the clarification @ 3 Grant. Your explanation makes total sense to me now.

  6. Kevin Wilkinson

    I can’t find epee (or épée) as anything other than a fencing sword. Is it an event too? Or am I on completely the wrong track?

  7. Gaufrid

    Kevin Wilkinson @6

    My usual three references don’t list it as an event but Wikipedia has “While modern sport fencing has three weapons—foil, épée, and sabre, each a separate event—épée is the only one in which the entire body is the valid target area …” so it appears that Neo has got it right.

  8. acd

    Thanks to Neo and Grant. I did not parse GROUND and was not certain that “air” = “character” in REPAIR,

  9. Dansar

    Thanks to Grant and Neo

    A pleasant crossword, not too easy or hard, but one or two points:

    I find FOR YOU unnecessary/inelegant in 21a

    9a I don’t question the setter’s right to use GROUND = TRAIN (it’s in Chambers), but for me GROUND = INITIATE in this sense. I liked the GO though.

    12a I don’t see why BEING WEIRDLY rather than IS WEIRD.

    Minor quibbles though.

  10. brucew@aus

    Thanks Neo and Grant

    An entertaining crossword with a good mix of clues that took about average time to solve.  Some particularly clever clues, including YELLOW FEVER, the misleading ‘Lear’ in NONSENSE and my last one in GROUND (which I was pleased to finally work out).

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