Independent 11,606 by Phi

It’s Phiday again!

Another interesting puzzle from our Friday regular setter. We had half-expected something seasonal today, but apart from that very word at 21ac, we can’t see anything going on.

However, we think there must be something happening to justify the inclusion of the unusual entries at 3d (unpronounceable!), 13d, 15ac and 17ac.

Could THEORY, POSIT and GUESS be connected in some way? Any thoughts out there?

Happy Christmas to one and all – and of course to Phi!

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Former Poet Laureate associated with Christmas pudding? (5)
DUFFY

Traditionally, Christmas pudding was formed into a ball and boiled in a bag (a duff or even plum-duff), so something associated with it might fancifully be referred to as DUFFY – a reference to Carol Ann Duffy, Poet Laureate from 2009 to 2019

4. Farm attendant fixed soil, removing nitrogen? (6,3)
STABLE LAD

STABLE (fixed) LAnD (soil) with the ‘n’ (nitrogen) removed

9. Again atop rocks in part of South America (9)
PATAGONIA

An anagram (‘rocks’) of AGAIN ATOP

10. Imagine French are enthralled by Augustus (5)
GUESS

ES (French for ‘are’ as in ‘tu es’ – ‘you are’) in or ‘enthralled by’ GUS (Augustus)

11. Speculation those people kept about soldiers (6)
THEORY

THEY (those people) round or ‘keeping’ OR (other ranks – ‘soldiers’)

12. Former PM in truncated article, leader dropped by Observer (8)
THATCHER

THe (article) missing the last letter or ‘truncated’ + wATCHER (observer) missing the first letters or ‘dropping leader’

14. Fairground attractions free every Saturday at the outset (5)
RIDES

RID (free) E S (first letters or ‘outset’ of every Saturday)

15. Rocks cooling Earth repeatedly from around 30 million years ago (9)
OLIGOCENE

An anagram (‘rocks’) of COOLING and E E (‘earth repeatedly’)

17. Horse in shock couple of rounds – it’s trailing (9)
APPALOOSA

APPAL (shock) O O (‘couple of rounds’) + SA (sex appeal – ‘it’) – a new word for us

19. Suggest I should fill job (5)
POSIT

I in or ‘filling’ POST (job)

21. Confirm accommodating a boy at a particular time of year (8)
SEASONAL

SEAL (confirm) round or ‘accommodating’ A SON (boy)

23. Performer is associated with time in role (not lead) (6)
ARTIST

IS after T (time) in pART (role) missing the first letter (‘not lead’)

26. Democrat leading schism in vague movement (5)
DRIFT

D (democrat) RIFT (schism)

27. Air not at first gusty, not at first in an unbalanced way (9)
UNEQUALLY

tUNE (air) missing the first letter or ‘not at first’ + sQUALLY (windy) missing the first letter or ‘not at first’

28. Amount of film about flat deserted US city (9)
CLEVELAND

CAN (‘amount of film’) round LEVEL (flat) + D (deserted)

29. Seeing King flee, make certain to follow (5)
ENSUE

ENSUrE (make certain) with the ‘r’ (King) missing or ‘fleeing’

DOWN
1. Transplant plants, say, and store (5)
DEPOT

If you were to move plants out of pots to transplant them you could be said to DE-POT them

2. Stupid couple of articles probing passing fashion (7)
FATHEAD

A THE (couple of articles) in or ‘probing’ FAD (passing fashion)

3. Raunchy days with girl, embracing grand pathway to heaven or hell? (9)
YGGDRASIL

An anagram (‘raunchy’) of DAYS and GIRL rounder ’embracing’ G (grand) – definitely a new word for Bert but Joyce vaguely remembered meeting it in a previous crossword although she could only remember  the first three letters.

4. Number in G & S, on reflection (4)
SONG

A cryptic definition: a reversal (‘on reflection’) of NO (number) in G and S

5. Disorder in a handcar – a scorpion? (10)
ARACHNIDAN

An anagram (‘disorder’) of IN A HANDCAR

6. Trivial insult son dismissed (5)
LIGHT

sLIGHT (insult) ‘dismissing’ ‘s’ (son)

7. Most of vulgar physicians beginning to eat variety of fruit (7)
LEECHEE

LEECHEs (an archaic vulgar word for physicians) missing the last letter (‘most of’) + E (first letter or ‘beginning’ of eat)

8. Uncomfortable involving one in effort to confuse (9)
DISORIENT

SORE (uncomfortable) round or ‘involving’ I (one) in DINT (effort)

13. Style of singing that could give you a carol tour (10)
COLORATURA

An anagram (‘could give you’) of A CAROL TOUR – another new word

14. Musically irregular concoction of harp and disco (9)
RHAPSODIC

An anagram (‘concoction’) of HARP and DISCO

16. Left work initially with a Parisienne – very auspicious! (9)
OPPORTUNE

PORT (left) with OP (work) in front (‘initially’) + UNE (French for feminine ‘a’)

18. Revamped plainer confectionery (7)
PRALINE

An anagram (‘revamped’) of PLAINER

20. Things protecting quiet farming areas – farmer’s heading away (7)
SHIELDS

SH (quiet) fIELDS (farming areas) missing ‘f’ (first letter or ‘heading’ of farmer)

22. Unusual tense used in this country’s English (5)
OUTRE

T (tense) in OUR (this county’s) + E (English)

24. Spoken sentence provides word for ‘herb’ (5)
THYME

A homophone (‘spoken’) of TIME (sentence)

25. Bit of greenery, perhaps, giving extra heart to another colour (4)
REED

RED (‘another colour’) with an extra E (middle letter or ‘heart’)

 

21 comments on “Independent 11,606 by Phi”

  1. Hmm. Held up by OLIGOCENE for a short while, having dismissed an anagram, given that Phi used ‘rocks’ as his anagrind only five clues earlier. And I don’t think it works the second time – it’s surely a directive instruction if preceding the fodder so should be ‘Rock’ – but I’d have preferred a different indicator altogether tbh.

    YGGDRASIL is a devil of a word to incorporate – not least as it has several spellings, just to make life difficult. I do recall seeing it most beautifully defined in a clue (with a surface involving fire) as simply ‘…ash everywhere’. As B&J observe, one feels there has to be a reason for those four long, unusual – and intersecting – words but I haven’t spotted it yet.

    Thanks Phi and B&J

  2. SONG
    Is it intended to be &lit?

    Is there a Carol/song/music theme?
    Carol Ann, Carol Thatcher …
    REED, TUNE …. & other obvious music references

    Also, there is a mini horse theme (?)..STABLE, APPALOOSA, RIDES etc., (PATAGONIA has some connection here, it looks).

    I am usually wrong in the theme-finding game. Just felt like sharing some thoughts…

  3. So we have a number of Christmas Carols (add Duffy to KVas list) Christmas THYME, A SONG and (OPPOR)TUNE. I still think we are missing something. DISORIENT did what it asys on the tin for me and so was my LOI.

  4. At least multiple exposures to Tolkein over the years gave insight into 3dn… less certain about the necessity to carry the type of horse or singing around as cerebral baggage…
    Thanks Phi n Bertandjoyce

  5. As it’s coming up to Christmas cracker time, can I point out how rare it is for Phi to come up with a duff clue? Apologies in advance.

  6. Thanks both. I won’t name them to save the extra typing but the long obscure words and the variant spellings were always going to partially defeat me here, in many cases even where I knew the construction, I simply had not heard of the answer. Like B&J I remembered only that a word began YGG and that I’d seen it before, but ask me to spell it all correctly on Boxing Day, and I will probably go cold turkey.

  7. One I discovered and did include was the less well-known US writer Carol GUESS. I would just note that Carol Reed is definitely the Odd Man Out.

    Merry Christmas everyone. Seasonality will continue next week.

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