Financial Times 17,161 by SLORMGORM

This week, and month, begin with a SLORMGORM…

As one expects from this setter, a solid selection of clues with great surfaces. 3d in particular made me chuckle.

Thanks SLORMGORM!

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Insult dry revolutionary to make trouble (7)
DISTURB

DIS (insult) + (BRUT)< (dry, <revolutionary)

5. One contriving to deceive Bow musician? (7)
FIDDLER

Double definition

9. Some agendas Lutheran backs in foreign city (5)
TULSA

([agend]AS LUT[heran])< (some, <backs)

10. Criminal arrested kidnapping black singer (9)
REDBREAST

(ARRESTED)* (*criminal) kidnapping B (black)

11. One supports French eatery moving lunchtime forward (9)
BRASSIERE

BRASSERIE (French eatery) moving I (lunchtime, one o'clock) forward

12. Tory seen with half-cut gals in line dance (5)
CONGA

CON (Tory) seen with GA[ls] (half-cut)

13. Old Bill operating with great precision (5)
EXACT

EX (old) + ACT (bill)

15. Government soldiers first to take account (9)
STATEMENT

STATE (government) + MEN (soldiers) + T[ake] (first to)

18. Decide tomorrow what one might do with mattress? (5,2,2)
SLEEP ON IT

Double definition

19. Idiot stealing head of state’s cheap wine (5)
PLONK

PLONK[er] (idiot, stealing ER (head of state))

21. Old Frenchman I finally understand in city abroad (5)
OMAHA

O (old) + M (Frenchman) + AHA (I finally understand)

23. Prunes cooked with oil could create this (9)
REPULSION

(PRUNES with OIL)* (*cooked)

25. Evaluation of artist one’s found in shock (9)
APPRAISAL

(RA (artist) + IS (one's)) found in APPAL (shock)

26. One spotted around new river restaurant (5)
DINER

DIE (one spotted) around N (new) + R (river)

27. Country suspended head of ailing railway (7)
HUNGARY

HUNG (suspended) + A[iling] (head of) + RY (railway)

28. Foremost of trawlermen fished with lines crossed? (7)
TANGLED

T[rawlermen] (foremost of) + ANGLED (fished)

DOWN
1. Lawyer on board could be girlfriend material? (7)
DATABLE

DA (lawyer) on TABLE (board)

2. A US talent travelling around Brunei, say (9)
SULTANATE

(A US TALENT)* (*travelling around)

3. Range of places men go when away from home (5)
URALS

UR[in]ALS (places men go, when away from IN (home))

4. Lawyer, possibly one employed by a landlord (9)
BARPERSON

Double (cryptic) definition

5. Sweet female magistrate to ignore joint (5)
FUDGE

F (female) + [j]UDGE (magistrate, to ignore J (joint))

6. A pitcher drunk at end of day’s extremely reasonable (4-5)
DIRT-CHEAP

(A PITCHER)* (*drunk) at end of D (day)

7. Acquire skill in Latin and bring home the bacon (5)
LEARN

L (Latin) and EARN (bring home the bacon)

8. Soldiers on open stretch of land pull back (7)
RETRACT

RE (soldiers) on TRACT (open stretch of land)

14. Best prohibit distribution of articles for leader? (3,6)
TOP BANANA

TOP (best) + BAN (prohibit distribution of) + AN + A (articles)

16. Guiding device in car given to holy group (9)
AUTOPILOT

AUTO (car) given to PI (holy) + LOT (group)

17. Passionate proposal to open fresh ale (9)
EMOTIONAL

MOTION (proposal) to open (ALE)* (*fresh)

18. Tolerate services being held up by a church (7)
STOMACH

(MOTS)< (services, <being held up) by A + CH (church)

20. Sort to get wine for family members (7)
KINDRED

KIND (sort) to get RED (wine)

22. Parrot scooping up small piece of nut tree (5)
ASPEN

APE (parrot) scooping up S (small) + N[ut] (piece of)

23. In high spirits, removing top is perilous (5)
RISKY

[f]RISKY (in high spirits, removing top)

24. Legless leader on port must be loaded (5)
LADEN

L[egless] (leader) on ADEN (port)

24 comments on “Financial Times 17,161 by SLORMGORM”

  1. Thanks for the blog, very enjoyable set of clues as usual from this setter. For 11Ac what is the actual link between the words ? Can our French speakers help please ?

  2. I first had 4d as ‘Bartender’ which had me scratching my head for 15ac until 18ac made me see the light, as it were!

    According to Wiki it seems Brasserie comes from the French word for Brewery and has no etymological link with Brassiere which was originally a French terms for a child’s undershirt…

    Thanks setter and blogger for a fun Monday offering.

  3. Enjoyable and not too taxing, with a fair number of smiles and only one or two groans. A few Britishisms I keep forgetting — including RE for soldiers and MOTS. We don’t have plonkers here, but I vaguely remember having heard it in some television shows. Is “pi” an abbreviation of “pious”?

  4. Teacow gives an apt description of this fun grid from Slormgorm. PLONKER and URALS were favourites.
    Steven is right, ‘brasser’ is the French verb to brew. Quite where we get the French-sounding brassiere from, I couldn’t say as ‘bra’ is ‘ le soutien-gorge’ in French (literally ‘throat-supporter’, ‘gorge’ being an old literary term for ‘chest’).
    Thanks both to Slormgorm and Teacow.

  5. Found this at etymonline:

    brassiere (n.)
    “form-fitting undergarment to support a woman’s breasts,” by 1902, a euphemistic borrowing in the garment trade, from French brassière “child’s chemise; shoulder strap” (17c.), from Old French braciere “arm guard” (14c.), from bras “an arm,” from Latin bracchium “an arm,” from Greek brakhion “an arm”

  6. Thanks for the discussion above re the non-etymologically related BRASSIERE and “brasserie”; something I’ve learnt too.

    Enjoyable puzzle with an initial “bartender” for 4d holding me up as well. I had to think about how MOTS = ‘services’ and for some reason STATEMENT was slow in coming, even with BARPERSON in.

    I’ll join the fans of PLONK and URALS.

    Thanks to Slormgorm and Teacow

  7. Thanks Slormgorm and Teacow
    13ac: I think “operating” is part of the indication for ACT, leaving “with great precision” as a perfectly good= definition for EXACT. After all, a Bill (before parliament) is a proposed new law. It becomes an Act when it is fully approved and is therefore operating.

  8. An MOT is not a service.

    It is a test.

    That is what the T stands for.

    No servicing is done while is car is having its MOT.

    I also thought that “end of day” would be Y, but accept it could be the D as well.

    I found this a bit trickier than most

    Thanks

  9. 19A was obvious from the definition and that I had P_O_K from the down clues but, like Geoff DU, I couldn’t work out where the synonym for “idiot” came from.

    I did like “DIE” for “one spotted” … after I had solved it.

    As a musician, I had exhausted all singers from “bass” to “baritone” before I finally solved 10A.

    Re 10A: my memories as a child growing up in England, we always used the term “Robin Redbreast” or just “Robin”, rather than the second word on its own.

  10. Aren’t we overthinking 11a. From the clue, I see no reason for there to be an etymological link between the two words. “Cheap wine” beginning with “P” had to be “PLONK” but needed Teacow to parse it. Thanks both.

  11. Isn’t the connection between brassiere and brasserie that the contents of both are sometimes drunk?

    As for 19, I couldn’t parse it even with the crossers – so now know what I am,

  12. I don’t know if the TV show “Only Fools and Horses” was ever aired Down Under or Stateside but the word ‘plonker’ was often aimed at the character Rodney.

  13. This was fun to solve, but MOT is not synonymous with service and bill is not synonymous with act. Also, isn’t it time that setters stopped using soldiers = men?

  14. I am glad I found this site a few weeks ago. Thanks to all involved!

    I buy the FT most days here in Brussels and spend a happy half hour in my local Brasserie (yes, really) with a coffee and croissant doing the crossword.

    This site has been a mercy for me when answers elude me, and hence (and hitherto) so did sleep!

    Merci beaucoup!

  15. Thomasina@18: I agree that bill is not synonymous with act. However, to clarify the point I made at comment 9, I do not think it is too much of a stretch to use “Bill operating” to refer to a bill that has taken effect after being passed into law, and therefore a bill that has become an act.

  16. Thanks Slormgorm for a satisfying crossword. My favourites were URALS, OMAHA, HUNGARY, and EMOTIONAL. I could not parse PLONK, not knowing that an idiot was a “plonker.” (It seems the British have a wealth of words that either deal with drunkeness or stupidity — Newcastle aside, I really haven’t encountered much of either in my travels there.)
    [By the way there was an excellent cryptic in Saturday’s Wall Street Journal. See my blog entry under Vulcan’s crossword for the description and link.]

  17. Thanks Tony@21 I will see if I can get a paper copy of this. Azed does a similar thing with Spoonerisms and does tell us which type of clue is which .

  18. Thanks Tony, it means a visit to the IT office if I can face it, I will have to take my Paddington Bear with me.

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