Financial Times 17,539 by MONK

A very enjoyable puzzle from Monk this morning.

Plenty of fun and some very witty clues. There are a couple of clues that I may have not fully understood, so do contribute your interpretations in the comments. Many thanks to Monk.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Heath backtracking on rubbish before s spreads rapidly (9)
MUSHROOMS

MOOR< (heath, <backtracking) on MUSH (rubbish) before S

6. Pick up tropical disease possessed by solver (5)
YOURS

“YAWS” (tropical disease, “pick up”)

9. Grip core of mangrove fruit (7)
GRAPPLE

[man]GR[ove] (core of) + APPLE (fruit)

10. Guy from Rome once owned and managed island breaks (7)
HADRIAN

HAD (owned) and (RAN (managed), I (island) breaks)

11. Get into trouble screwing with PC? (3,2)
COP IT

IT (screwing) with COP (PC)

12. Perhaps service water sports around western island (9)
TABLEWARE

(WATER)* (*sports) around ELBA< (island, <western)
Edited – I had made an error previously…

14. Leading characters in William of Orange’s court (3)
WOO

W[illiam] O[f] O[range] (leading characters)

15. Test betrayal she concocted (11)
BREATHALYSE

(BETRAYAL SHE)* (*concocted)

17. Off-the-shelf book, perhaps two starting in several months? (5-2-4)
READY TO WEAR

READ (book, perhaps) + (TWO)* (*starting) in YEAR (several months)

19. Nothing aboard extremely heavy boat (3)
HOY

O (nothing) aboard H[eav]Y (extremely)

20. Football legend backing county’s top performers, the greatest? (9)
ELEPHANTS

PELE< (football legend, <backing) + HANTS (county)

I assume ‘top performers’ refers to the mind/top and their great ability to remember. Elephants are the biggest/greatest mammals.

22.
Punishment once held back in justifiable urgency (5)

GRUEL

[justifib]LE URG[ency]< (held <back in)

24. Observe where to go in temporary shelter (7)
TWIGLOO

TWIG (observe) + LOO (where to go)

26. Facetiously more noble in days of yore (7)
EARLIER

Cryptic definition

EARL-IER

27. Sail ahead of, on occasion, standard navy marines we commission (5)
ROYAL

Double definition

28. Stupid, missing as crossing river or section of canal (9)
INTESTINE

[as]ININE (stupid, missing AS) crossing TEST (river)

DOWN
1. Tremendous leg-over, I see (5)
MAGIC

GAM< (leg, <over) + IC (I see)

2. Cleaner takes bogus waste (7)
SHAMPOO

SHAM (bogus) + POO (waste)

3. Honourably pay butler for working (9)
REPUTABLY

(PAY BUTLER)* (*for working)

4. Male in public display behind where the cow went? (4,3,4)
OVER THE MOON

HE (male) in OVERT (public) + MOON (display behind)
From the nursery rhyme ‘Hey Diddle Diddle’

5. Note pulled-up short stockings (3)

SOH

HOS[e] (stockings, short, <pulled up)

6. Sing up in party hosted by diocese (5)
YODLE

(DO (party) hosted by ELY (diocese))< (<up in)

7. Relating to one college Rector banned from lounge (7)
UNITARY

UNI (college) + TAR[r]Y (lounge, R (rector) banned from)

8. Genuinely past joining bank (9)
SINCERELY

SINCE (past) joining RELY (bank)

13. Woody nightshade is better with wet ground (11)
BITTERSWEET

(IS BETTER with WET)* (*ground)

14. Rowers etc. developed as City material? (9)
WORCESTER

(ROWERS ETC)* (*developed)
Worcester is a porcelain brand named for the English city it originates from

16. Drags arse about — that’s concerning (2,7)
AS REGARDS

(DRAGS ARSE)* (*about)

18. Pleasantness ain’t my bent when covering base (7)
AMENITY

(AINT MY)* (*bent) when covering E (base)
E in mathematics (‘Euler’s number’) is the base of natural logarithms

19. Artiste formerly in international couple beginning to hurry up (7)
HOUDINI

(IN + I (International) + DUO (couple) + H[urry] (beginning to))< (<up)

21. For some, religiously legitimate passage contains answer (5)
HALAL

HALL (passage) contains A (answer)

23. Both hands holding a hollow globe — it’s huge (5)
LARGE

L + R (both hands, Left + Right) holding A + G[lob]E (hollow)

25. Oscar’s AC/DC fetish (3)
OBI

O (Oscar, from the NATO alphabet) + BI (AC/DC)
Fetish in the sense of a charm/talisman, of which one example is an obi

43 comments on “Financial Times 17,539 by MONK”

  1. Well, let’s just say it was an educational experience. Never heard of TWIGLOO, HOY, GAM, yaws, GRUEL, OBI. Never seen YODLE spelt thus (but yes, my dictionary acknowledges it as an alternative). And didn’t know this meaning of BITTERSWEET.

    Couldn’t parse INTESTINE, OBI, COP IT, ELEPHANTS or ROYAL, but I haven’t read the above blog yet, and am anticipating a “D’oh!” or two.

    What is “starting” doing in the clue for 17a?

    I thought that “display behind” for “moon” was a bit — what’s the word I’m after? — cheeky? It brought a smile.

    Synonyms that I wasn’t entirely comfortable with (but no doubt the mighty Chambers will sanction) were twig/observe and tarry/lounge.

    Oh and is Ely the only diocese in the UK? It seems to feature a lot in Crossword Land!

  2. TABLEWARE – WATER* (sports as anagrind?) around ELBA< (western). Blog uses W twice.

    ELEPHANTS – I took ‘top’ as reference to a circus.

    ROYAL – Should mention ‘Royal’ can come before: standard, navy, marines, we and commission.

  3. Thanks to both commenters – I see my error with ‘western’. I’ll amend the blog and come back to the other comments as well!

  4. Parsed all three (TABLEWARE, ELEPHANTS and ROYAL) as Hovis@5.

    ROYAL
    Def1: sail (a small sail)
    Def2: ahead of, on occasion….commission

  5. GDU@1
    READY-TO-WEAR
    Start in the sense of ‘spring/jump suddenly’. I agree with the parsing in the blog.

  6. Cheeky, as GDU says, and not just 4d. I liked COP IT, ‘leg-over’ (1d) and particularly AS REGARDS for the traditional usage of ‘concerning’ (the more contemporary meaning being troubling, to my ear, anyway).
    Admired the corner constructions too. I did have to rejig my LOI -TABLEWARE – when it was clear the more familiar YODEL wouldn’t fit. All very fair though.
    Thanks to Monk and Oriel.

  7. Geoff Down Under@3 – other short counties you might see:
    Beds, Berks, Bucks, Cambs, Glos, HANTS, Leics, Lincs, NortHANTS, Notts, Oxon, Salop, Staffs, Warks, Wilts, & Worcs for WORCESTERshire

  8. Sorry Diane@16
    Your comment wasn’t there when I posted @17. My post included WORCESTER, which prompted me to notice and immediately post the Ninas.

  9. 26a – EARLIER – Facetiously more noble in days of yore (7)
    I don’t get a pdm from these whimsical clues where you have to invent a word EARLY – “like an earl” and its comparative – “more like an earl”.
    I didn’t like it yesterday when Hoskins clued it in much the same way.

  10. Thanks for the blog and the extras from everyone , I totally missed the corners, I really enjoyed this.
    Peak MAGIC MUSHROOM season now , traditionally Liiberty Cap , small and hard to find , they seem to like sheep fields on the moors. Avoid the Fly Agaric , quite dangerous.

  11. 19A Hoy and 24A Twigloo were new to me.

    Re 11A: Hasn’t “It” for having sex been in several crosswords this week? I seem to remember that Geoff Down Under didn’t know it a few days ago. Maybe that’s why Australia’s population is falling!

  12. I am with GDU@1 on this – I have a list of 14 words that are new to me or are used in a way I have never seen before.

    A couple of smiles with LARGE and OVER THE MOON. I did manage to finish, and I parsed all but three clues, but I am afraid I did not enjoy it much. In particular, I started to resent the growing list of unknown words and terms. When someone as skilled and experienced as Oriel cannot parse everything, you have to wonder what the point is.

    And, as always, I completely missed the corner constructions – kudos to Monk for that.

    Thanks Oriel and Monk

  13. Although there were some new and obscure new words, I found it a most enjoyable puzzle . Glad to learn psilocybin , probably not much use to me but who knows?
    Thanks to setter and blogger and to everyone who made interesting comments.

  14. It’s always a good day when I can nearly complete a Monk crossword — I missed ELEPHANTS and INTESTINE but I was able to manage the rest. Sure, there were unusual words but it wouldn’t be Monk otherwise. I found those quite fair because they were clued so well. My overall favourites were EARLIER, SINCERELY, and HOUDINI. Good spot, Diane @16 on the corner constructions — I should have known to look for an “extra” in a Monk crossword. Thanks Monk, and Oriel for the blog.

  15. I have only done a few Monks, and looking through old blogs I did not really enjoy any of them. I am very happy for those who like this sort of challenge, but he is just not my sort of setter, it seems.

    I think I will avoid his puzzles for a while. It will save you all from reading my bellyaching.

  16. Martyn@38
    I quite understand your position but I do not mind your bellyaching. Why not stick with the Monk and you might get more on his wavelength? Unusual words might be frustrating but one does learn something.

  17. [Martyn #38: Monk used to be on my “don’t attempt” list but as I improved over the years he’s become one of my favourite setters.]

  18. I normally leave Monk’s crosswords alone as they always annoy me intensely. I thought I’d give this one a try though as I missed it yesterday and completed today’s Gozo quite quickly.

    I was soon feeling intensely annoyed.

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