Atrica has provided our latest Tuesday challenge.
I found this quite a challenge, and after two attempts, I needed to cheat to get 26, which was an unfamiliar spelling to me; once 26 was in, I then twigged what 27 had to be.
Today is Tuesday, so there must be a theme hidden here somewhere. Once again, I have failed to identify one, despite fully expecting there to be a Nina, which there doesn’t appear to be.
My favourite clues today were 14, 16 and 23, for their smooth surface readings; the & lit. at 19; and 30, for sheer quirkiness.
*(…) indicates an anagram; definitions are italicised; // separates definitions in multiple-definition clues
Across | ||
07 | COLUMN | Upright officer, I’ll soon remember name
COL (=officer, i.e. colonel) + UM (=I’ll soon remember, said as one racks one’s brain) + N (=name); in architecture, a column is an upright (structure), pillar |
08 | CHORALLY | Endless task getting band together in combined voices
CHOR<e> (=task; “endless” means last letter is dropped) + ALLY (=band together, become allies) |
10 | TOMB | Life’s final destination? Three steps back from where it started in the first place
WOMB (=where life started in the first place); “three steps back” means that the letter “t” is three places back in the alphabet from the letter “w” |
11 | FLOOR | Level of // puzzle
Double definition: a floor is a level, storey AND to floor is to puzzle, bamboozle someone |
12 | BOMB | A lot of money for // a turkey
Double definition: in colloquial English, a bomb is a lot of money AND a bomb is a turkey, a flop, a failure (of film, play) |
13 | ANSWERED | Originally servants were inside and picked up the phone
[S<ervants> (“originally” means first letter only) + WERE] in AND |
16 | GNEISS | Hard rock from Genesis rejecting the middle ground
*(GEN<e>SIS); “rejecting the middle ground” means that the middle letter is dropped from anagram, indicated by “from” |
17 | ISLE | Sounds like I’m going to Tahiti perhaps
Homophone (“sounds like”) of “I’ll (=I’m going to)” |
18 | COUPS | Brilliant moves by police in uniform? No, the reverse
U (=uniform, in radio telecommunications) in COPS (=police) |
19 | KNEE | Skin here’s scraped occasionally
<s>K<i>N <h>E<r>E; “occasionally” means alternate letters only are used; & lit. |
21 | CAESAR | Autocrat knocking back drink in limousine?
AES (SEA=(the) drink, “knocking back” indicates reversal) in CAR (=limousine?) |
23 | HONORARY | Unpaid, old and not welcomed
NOR (=and not) in HOARY (=old, grey) |
25 | ERNE | Wise, perhaps, to ignore first person to see flying predator
ERN<i>E (=Wise, perhaps, i.e. British comedian from the duo Morecambe and Wise); “to ignore first person (=I, in grammar)” means letter “i” is dropped |
26 | MIAOU | Mike disfavours all the vowels in part of a Persian’s vocabulary
M (=Mike, in radio telecommunications) + <d>I<sf>A<v>OU<rs> (“all the vowels in” means vowels only are used); a Persian is a type of cat! |
28 | WRIT | Legal document drafted with missing figure
WRIT<ten> (=drafted; “with missing figure (=ten)” means letters “ten” are dropped) |
29 | RENEGUED | Perhaps Descartes, stuck without line, changed his mind
RENÉ (=perhaps Descartes, i.e. French philosopher) + G<l>UED (=stuck; “without line (=L)” means letter “l” is dropped) |
30 | HOARSE | Heard report of naysayer struggling with speech
Homophone of “horse (“neigh”-sayer, itself a homophone of “naysayer”!!)” |
Down | ||
01 | COLOGNES | Things that make you smell nice clog nose, unfortunately
*(CLOG NOSE); “unfortunately” is the anagram indicator |
02 | NUMB | Unfeeling monarch abandons count
NUMB<er> (=count; “monarch (=ER, i.e. Elizabeth Regina) abandons“ means letters “er” are dropped) |
03 | KNIFER | Useless refusenik turned up after I let down assassin
“use-less” means that letters are dropped; “turned up” indicates vertical reversal; “after I let down” means that letter “i” falls to a lower place in the word |
04 | ECHO | Copy husband wearing green
H (=husband) in ECO (=green, i.e. ecological) |
05 | MOORAGES | Parking fees? Choose between short and long durations
MO (=short duration, i.e. moment) OR (=choose between) AGES (=long duration) |
06 | JAWBREAKER | Judge criminal after the first sign of larceny? That’s hard to say
J (=judge) + <l>AWBREAKER (=criminal; “after first sign (=initial letter) of larceny” means that letter “l” is disregarded) |
09 | LIMBS | Extremities oddly disposed of, slain with support of Mohammed bin Salman initially
<s>L<a>I<n> (“oddly” means odd letters only are used) + M<ohammed> B<in> S<alman> (“initially” means first letters only are used) |
14 | WHENSOEVER | The end of Gove who’s never compromised at any time
*(<gov>E + WHO’S NEVER); “end of” means last letter only is used in anagram, indicated by “compromised” |
15 | DOUGH | Party that disgusts me makes money
DO (=party, function) + UGH (=that disgusts me) |
18 | CHROMIUM | The leading pair of criminal element
CR<iminal>; “leading pair of” means first two letters only are used, i.e. the chemical symbol for |
20 | EARLIEST | Original insiders to hear lies trumpeted
Hidden (“insiders”) in “hEAR LIES Trumpeted” |
22 | AERIE | A lake bird’s nest
A + ERIE (=lake, in North America) |
24 | NAUGHT | Zip’s briefly misbehaving
NAUGHT<y> (=misbehaving, of child); “briefly” means last letter is dropped |
27 | AIDE | What Cummings was to Johnson: a set of uncoordinated instincts on Europe’s finish
A + ID (=set of uncoordinated instincts, in psychoanalysis) + <europ>E (“finish” means last letter is dropped); Dominic Cummings was an aide to former UK PM Boris Johnson |
28 | WRAP | Raised hand grasping rector’s blanket
R (=rector) in WAP (PAW=hand; “raised” indicates vertical reversal) |
Thanks, Atrica and RR!
Liked MIAOU, HOARSE, KNIFER, JAWBREAKER and AIDE.
GNEISS
I took ‘ground’ as the anagrind (Genesis rejecting the middle).
Thanks RatkojaRiku and Atrica.
It was hard esp 26 and 30 last two in.
Both great clues. Naysayer and Persian’s vocabulary, indeed!
others: HONORARY, RENEGUED, KNIFER, MOORAGES.
I think all the answers have a ‘silent’ letter of some sort. Thanks to setter and blogger.
Very good spot, Jen @3, you may well be on to something there. I looked for both a theme and Nina and couldn’t find anything.
Yes, quite difficult and I had trouble with the ones mentioned by RR as well as a few others. Favourites were the ‘criminal element’ and the animal noises at MIAOU and HOARSE.
Thanks to Atrica and RR and well done again to Jen
Very good puzzle idea.
I had the same thought as Jen but wasn’t altogether convinced so pleased I wasn’t the only one to think it.
Thanks both. Some inventive cluing, notwithstanding that some of them defeated me, at least in the parsing, e.g. HONORARY and CHROMIUM, the latter reflecting my lack of knowledge of chemistry. It all took a while, which I was glad of, whilst enduring TransPennine Express (contradiction in terms) in all its glory!
Yes. Tough but entertaining. Spent too long at 10a trying to make EDEN (where life started ) out of END and three moves back. No.
Thanks A and R