Financial Times 16,414 by ZAMORCA

A satisfying challenge from ZAMORCA this morning…

And, if I'm not much mistaken, a pangram to boot!

All good stuff, though I think my parsing of 14d and 27a is a bit dodgy.

Thanks ZAMORCA!

image of grid

ACROSS
1 Soldiers left two pints unfinished before argument (7)
QUARREL

(RE (soldiers) + L (left)), QUAR[t] (two pints, unfinished) before

5 Racket during bash spoiled holy day (7)
SABBATH

BAT (racket) during (BASH)* (*spoiled)

9 Jack in drugs to get court discharge (5)
EJECT

J (jack) in EE (drugs) to get CT (court)

10 Introducing discussion of fish in Crosby (9)
BROACHING

ROACH (fish) in BING (crosby)

11 Translate Pinter play first in Russian and French (9)
INTERPRET

(PINTER)* (*play) + R[ussian] (first in) + ET (and, in french)

12 Heard angry calls for alcohol (5)
BOOZE

"boos" (angry calls, "heard")

13 Cause contamination of dressing (5)
SAUCE

(CAUSE)* (*contamination)

15 Rude old fellow swamps me with very extreme language (9)
OFFENSIVE

O (old) + F (fellow) + FENS (swamps) + I (me) with V (very) + [languag]E (extreme)

18 A maths geek’s no good when forced to hurry (4,5)
MAKE HASTE

(A MATHS [g]EEK (no good))* (*forced)

19 Predatory animal has female bird protecting young one (5)
HYENA

HEN (female bird) protecting Y (young) + A (one)

21 Get rid of wasteland (5)
SCRUB

Double definition.

23 Thought company nervous having lost leader (9)
COGITATED

CO (company) + [a]GITATED (nervous, having lost leader)

25 Eager for mischievous child to get a connection with books (9)
IMPATIENT

IMP (mischievous child) to get A + TIE (connection) with NT (books, new testament)

26 Dismantle canape and remove a nut (5)
PECAN

(CAN[a]PE (remove a))* (*dismantle)

27 Times without number, regret being unfaithful (3,4)
NOT TRUE

TT (times) without NO (number) + RUE (regret)

28 Decide to do puzzle again (7)
RESOLVE

Double definition

DOWN
1 Challenges point in risqué production (7)
QUERIES

E (point) in (RISQUE)* (*production)

2 Amazed to pronounce rower beaten (3-6)
AWE STRUCK

"oar" (rower, "pronounce") + STRUCK (beaten)

3 Device going round either way (5)
ROTOR

Cryptic definition.
ROTOR being a palindrome.

4 Wearisome debts after childbirth in America (9)
LABORIOUS

IOUS (debts) after LABOR (childbirth, in america)

5 Way to take away fat (5)
STOUT

ST (way) + OUT (to take away)

6 Form of support for ordinary members? (4,5)
BACK BENCH

Cryptic definition.

7 Morning turn around island with Spanish friend (5)
AMIGO

(AM (morning) + GO (turn)) around I (island)

8 Cleaning routine picked up important bit of DNA (7)
HYGIENE

"high gene" (important bit of dna, "picked up")

14 Artist displaying work in old house’s keeping one section restricted to Americans (9)
EXHIBITOR

(EX (old) + HO (house)) keeping (I (one) BIT (section)) + R (restricted, to americans)

16 Fine crew bringing in King and Queen’s vessel (9)
FREIGHTER

((F (fine) + EIGHT (crew)) bringing in R (king)) and ER (queen)

17 Duplicate papers briefly tempt top grade student (9)
IDENTICAL

ID (papers) + ENTIC[e] (tempt, briefly) + A (top grade) + L (student)

18 Fail to get on satellite-bearing space flight (7)
MISSION

MISS (fail) to get on IO (satellite, a moon of jupiter) + N (bearing)

20 Worker in high mountains reduced to a slow tempo (7)
ANDANTE

ANT (worker) in ANDE[s] (high mountains, reduced)

22 Regularly reed grass is put in a new container (5)
REPOT

R[e]E[d] (regularly) + POT (grass)

23 Vocal group from town in Cheshire (5)
CREWE

"crew" (group, "vocal")

24 Spelling mistakes found in community posters (5)
TYPOS

[communi]TY POS[ters]

11 comments on “Financial Times 16,414 by ZAMORCA”

  1. Hovis

    A nice, simple start to the week. Didn’t check the pangram but noticed the possibility.

    I did wonder why he/she chose to clue the final R in 14d that way when “restricted initially” would work.

    Thanks to Zamorca and Teacow.

  2. Ilan Caron

    thanks Z and T! I agree with your parsing of both 27a and 14d.  I guess there are still R-rated films in the US.  Thanks for decomposing 18d for me — I didn’t see N=bearing.  I had SCRAP for 21a at first (almost works!) until EXHIBITOR showed me the error of my ways.

  3. ACD

    Thanks to Zamorca and Teacow. Just right for a Monday. I’m another who started with SCRAP and also was late spotting “contamination” for Cause-SAUCE.

  4. Angstony

    I had no problem parsing 14d and I could just about make sense of 27a by ignoring the bad grammar and inferring ‘is’ after ‘without’, but for the life in me I couldn’t make 16d work and I’m surprised it hasn’t been questioned here already. I mean, how does EIGHT bringing in (R + ER) result in R+EIGHT+ER? Unless ‘bringing in’ can somehow mean the opposite of what it normally does, this construction makes no sense to me. Or am I missing something here?

    Thanks to all.

  5. Sally

    Angstony @4: It’s all about how you read it. In this case this works as:

    1. Fine crew bringing in King (F; EIGHT bringing in R)

    2. and Queen’s (+ ER)

    Hope that helps!

  6. Angstony

    Sally @5: It does, thank you! I’d somehow forgotten the preceding F and tried to parse the remainder of the clue separately. It’s also rather embarrassing that if I’d looked properly at Teacow’s  parsing I would have seen the bracketing that explains it.

    I also forgot to say in my previous comment that apart from that misunderstanding I did enjoy the crossword.  Favourites were MISSION and MAKE HASTE.

  7. Tony Santucci

    Enjoyable start to the week. Missed BROACHING not knowing that roach is a fish. Favorites included EJECT and ANDANTE. Thanks Zamorca and Teacow.

  8. brucew@aus

    Thanks Zamorca and Teacow
    Not too many problems with this one, although I didn’t fully parse EXHIBITOR.
    Noted that a pangram was likely after getting a Q,J and Z early on.
    Finished in the SW corner with SCRUB and MISSION.

  9. Grumpy

    Thanks to Teacow & Zamorca. This was most enjoyable.
    I particularly liked the smooth surface of 18dn.

  10. Lucio

    I also liked this puzzle, especially since I was able to complete it (which is not always the case)!

    However, I have two issues.

    On 15ac, in my view ME cannot become I. The two words may be regarded as interchangeable in a phrase such as “it’s me”, that may become “it’s I”. I may be influenced by having to do latin for 7 years in secondary school, but with respect to personal pronouns the declination of cases is retained in English too. In “swamps me” ME is clearly the accusative case, whereas I is the nominative case: one cannot replace the other, any more that HIM could not be replaced by HE.

    As for 8d, when I read “important bit of DNA” as a geneticist I immediately thought it must be GENE. But I don’t see how the phrase ‘picked up’ would allow for high to become HY, and even less for GENE to become GIENE.

    On the other hand, I specially liked 1ac and 20d.

    Thanks to Zamorca and to Teacow for a perfect blog

  11. Logoch

    Lucio@10. Maybe too late with this, but “picked up” means sounds like. So “high gene” sounds like “hygiene”

Comments are closed.