Financial Times 17,171 by BRADMAN

A tough Friday challenge from BRADMAN

FF: 9 DD: 9

I couldnt get across the finish line on my own and needed help from the interwebs to solve for a couple of clues .

ACROSS
1 DOWN TOWN
Depressed with nowt changing in city centre? (4,4)

DOWN ( depressed ) [ NOWT ]*

5 PACERS
Horses quietly sitting by maple trees? (6)

P ( quietly ) ACERS ( maple trees )

8 SEE
Prophet’s right to leave Liverpool maybe (3)

SEEr ( prophet, without R – right )

9 RUSTICATED
Bumpkin and a fifties-style youth suspended by Oxford? (10)

RUSTIC ( bumpkin ) A TED ( fifties-style youth )

10 UNSOCIAL
Nasty cousin, gangster disregarding other people (8)

[ COUSIN ]* AL ( gangster, capone )

11 ISATIN
Confession of previous protester in compound? (6)

cryptic def; read as I SAT IN ( confession of previous protestor )

12 AHEM
The fellow trapped by a maiden? Excuse me! (4)

HE ( the fellow ) in [ A M ( maiden ) ]

14 FRIGHTENED
Panicky gent fired unfairly – hard to bear (10)

[ GENT FIRED ]* containing H ( hard )

17 TRANSISTOR
Informal radio star is torn apart (10)

[ STAR IS TORN ]*

20 SAWS
Gnomes? They have teeth (4)

double def

23 STRAIN
Strive in street against wet weather (6)

ST ( street ) RAIN ( wet weather )

24 CODPIECE
What once offered accommodation for male member (8)

cryptic def? had to use help to solve this.

25 ADAPTATION
Girl and quiet French actor performing in film based on a book? (10)

ADA ( girl ) P ( quiet ) TATI ( french actor ) ON ( performing )

26 IDO
Language of one leading party (3)

I ( one ) DO ( party )

27 ASCEND
Climb Andes with difficulty, getting cold inside (6)

[ ANDES ]* containing C ( cold )

28 STEMMATA
Test mama out with family trees (8)

[ TEST MAMA ]* – new word for me but gettable from the wordplay

DOWN
1 DISPUTANT
Show disrespect and put worker down as bolshy type? (9)

DIS ( show disrespect ) PUT ANT ( worker )

2 WOE IS ME
Cry of misery from some wife, female put out terribly (3,2,2)

[ SOME WIfE ( without F – female ) ]*

3 THRACE
Old country spot as setting for hotel (6)

TRACE ( spot ) containing H ( hotel )

4 WISEACRES
We’re crass, not right, I fancy (9)

[ WERE CrASS ( without R – right ) I ]* ; not sure if i should mark the entire clue as definition or not

5 PECKISH
Slight sign of affection – is husband ready for meal? (7)

PECK ( slight sign of affection ) IS H ( husband )

6 COTTAGERS
Actors get upset – they have relatively small accommodation (9)

[ ACTORS GET ]*

7 RED WINE
Socialist victory ending with the party drink? (3,4)

RED ( socialist ) WIN ( victory ) E ( thE, ending? )

13 MENTAL AGE
Household penning short account – it shows a measure of intelligence (6,3)

MENAGE ( household ) containing TALk ( account, short )

15 GEOLOGIST
Scientist to understand about old records found around India (9)

GET ( understand ) around [ O ( old ) { LOGS ( records ) around I ( india ) } ]

16 DESDEMONA
Some French devil descending on a woman on stage (9)

DES ( some , french ) DEMON ( devil ) A – othello's wife

18 RITUALS
Church observances offering some spiritual satisfaction? (7)

hidden in "..spiRITUAL Satisfaction"; would have liked a more balanced split for the spread

19 IGNITED
I’d get in drunk and fired up (7)

[ ID GET IN ]*

21 AMERICA
Country boy hugged by a mother (7)

ERIC ( boy ) in [ A MA ( mother ) ]

22 EPONYM
Special name of English horse followed by millions (6)

E ( english ) PONY ( horse ) M ( millions )

17 comments on “Financial Times 17,171 by BRADMAN”

  1. I quite enjoyed this, but there were a few that I couldn;t solve till I came here. Why is Ted a fifties-style youth? I hadn’t heard of Jacques Tati, nor isatin. Nor had I heard of the second meaning for “gnome”. Why is a transistor an informal radio?

    No particular favourites today.

  2. Thanks for the blog, I think you are right for CODPIECE but the whole clue is a cryptic definition with “once” meaning it is old . I agree for WISEACRES, the entire clue is the definition and the word play so I would call it an &Lit.
    I thought STEMMATA was something totally different so I have learnt a new meaning.
    Hard but fair would sum this up for me.

  3. You just beat me Geoff, a few UK things mainly. TEDDY BOYS was a 1950s youth cult in the UK , called TEDs, they would dress up like Edwardian dandies and liked US rock and roll.
    What we call a radio has had many names , radiogram and wireless are old terms. The TRANSISTOR radio came in during the 1960s, mainly from Japan. Much smaller and portable, containing transistors rather than valves. The young liked them as they were portable and called them TRANSISTORS .

  4. Thank you, Roz. No wonder I didn’t understand Ted. As far as transistors are concerned, perhaps I’m thick, but I still don’t see why they’re informal.

  5. You are welcome Geoff, you can be the expert when we get Australian references.
    Transistors – it is really the name of the component inside, they are called transistor radios, the teenagers shortened this to transistors or trannies , is this informal? I am only musing.
    Radio itself is perhaps an informal name, they are radiowave receivers . When does a name become informal?

  6. I had the same question as Geoff over ‘informal’ as I’ve only ever used ‘radio’. The answer was clear in any case. I also didn’t get ISATIN – so obvious when I saw this blog.
    STEMMATA was a new term for me too but gettable.
    Favourites were SAWS and DESDEMONA.
    Thanks to Bradman, on whom we can depend for a Friday workout, and also to Turbolegs.

  7. Clue of the day has to got to be 24A. In fact, probably the clue of the year.

    Stemmata was new to me and I don’t quite know why Liverpool is a “see”. I assume this is in the religious sense of “see”.

    Re 17A, I agree with my countryman Geoff, how does “informal” fit in? Another interpretation could be that “informal” indicates an anagram and “apart” could be that a transistor is “a part” of a radio. Having written that, I’m not convinced of my argument.

    All this talk of Teddy Boys reminds me of the follow-ups: Mods, Rockers, then Hippies and Flower Children… now we only have “snowflakes”.

  8. Peter @8 Liverpool is very much a see. It has Anglican and Catholic cathedrals, an Anglican bishop and a Catholic Arch-Bishop.
    It makes a change from Ely .

  9. 17A. Roz has it in principal but I think its sequence was slightly different. When they were first produced and marketed they were called a TRANSISTOR RADIO. After a time the name was shortened so “informally” they were called a TRANSISTOR.

    “Informal: denoting the grammatical structures, vocabulary, and idiom suitable to everyday language and conversation rather than to official or formal contexts.”

  10. Re 17A: check out Buck Owens “Made in Japan” – opening lyrics “My transistor radio comes from far away”. I accept that this is not a helpful contribution to the conversation but it’s worth a listen. I saw Buck live at the Sydney Entertainment Centre sometime in the last century.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udHeBbv0RcI

    Thanks Roz for your explanation of “see”. I always thought that it meant catholic-related. I agree with your comment about it not being “Ely”.

  11. I started off well, but was held up at the end with the barely remembered ISATIN as my final one in. Never heard of STEMMATA but the anagram fodder and crossers made it possible. I agree with Roz and trenodia about the ‘Informal radio’.

    Favourites were the CODPIECE cryptic def and WISEACRES which would do as an &lit for me.

    Thanks to Bradman and Turbolegs

  12. I think BRADMAN is always fair and sticks to the rules. That does not mean the puzzle is easy and I found it strangely easy for the first part and rather difficult for the second.

  13. I too was complacent, having written in a scattering of clues, across and down, before shuddering to a temporary halt then grinding to the end. But I feel comfortable with Bradman, and always enjoy his puzzles. One objection. Speaking as an ex-chemist, I’m here to reassure you all that ISATIN is not general knowledge; indeed it wouldn’t be generally known among chemists. Rather like offering the clue ‘author’, and the answer being, say, FENWICK.

  14. We didn’t find this too difficult and completed it fairly quickly. One expects the occasional unfamiliar words from Bradman, and STEMMATA was new to us, although easily got from the wordplay and confirmed in Chambers. As another ex-chemist, one of us did know of ISATIN (but couldn’t tell you much about it). As far as informality goes for TRANSISTOR, a lof of younger folk might have been even more informal and referred to one as a ‘tranny’.
    Among others we liked AHEM and PECKISH, as well as CODPIECE. The last-named a cryptic definition? Not very, we thought, but a nice clue nevertheless.
    Thanks, Bradman and Turbolegs.

  15. Maybe because I’m so into art and art history, codpiece came to me immediately, but much to my surprise!

Comments are closed.