Financial Times 17,941 by BOBCAT

BOBCAT kicks off the week…

A fun puzzle that was easier to solve than to parse. Please excuse some of my slightly hand-waving arguments.

This setter normally includes a feline based Nina, and did not fail to disappoint this time. I don’t know if the LEO was intentional, but I’ve highlighted it anyway.

I particularly liked 8d as it sounds like a character from Asterix.

 

Thanks BOBCAT!

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Old PM has packed in cycling (7)
ASQUITH

HAS QUIT (packed in), cycling (i.e., cycling the H to the end)

5. Literary folk giving up time for final character castings (7)
BRONZES

BRONTES (literary folk, giving up T (time) for Z (final character))

9. Plunder ship, releasing its cargo and fuel (5)
SPOIL

S[hi]P (releasing its cargo) and OIL (fuel)

10. Guide taking in source of Nile after me gets wetter (9)
MOISTENER

(STEER (guide) taking in N[ile] (source of)) after MOI (me)

11. Length of time Royal Marines managed without playing nim (5,4)
SOLAR YEAR

(ROYAL [m]AR[in]ES)* (*managed, without (NIM)* (*playing))

12. I’m surprised in brothel lounge (5)
HELLO

[brot]HEL LO[unge] (in)

13. How one might carelessly blend dynamite with sulphur? (6-8)
ABSENT-MINDEDLY

(BLEND DYNAMITE with S (sulphur))* (*carelessly) &lit

18. What determines the value of imported bread in a ready market? (4,2,8)
RATE OF EXCHANGE

Cryptic definition

20. I’m going to stop working with gold outside (5)
ADIEU

DIE (to stop working) with AU (gold) outside

22. Cover garden areas before lady strips (9)
BEDSPREAD

BEDS (garden areas) + PRE (before) + [l]AD[y] (strips)

24. This power of perception cannot be acquired thus (9)
INTUITION

IN TUITION (this power of perception cannot be acquired thus)

25. Jog in the altogether around the centre of Bingley (5)
NUDGE

NUDE (in the altogether) around [bin]G[ley] (the centre of)

26. Privates cover ground for year, new territorials having been discharged (1-6)
Y-FRONTS

(FOR + Y (year))* (*ground) + N (new) + T[erritorial]S (having been discharged)

27. Cipher note penetrating rear of college chapel (7)
ENCRYPT

N (note) penetrating ([colleg]E (rear of) + CRYPT (chapel))

DOWN
1. Help player wanting debut (6)
ASSIST

[b]ASSIST (player, wanting debut)

2. Medley of quite bold tunes? (9)
QUODLIBET

(QUITE BOLD)* (*medley) &lit

3. He’s wasting time introducing Liberal to topless equestrian (5)
IDLER

introducing L (liberal) to [r]IDER (equestrian, topless)

4. Supporter’s condition almost has Bobcat installing college without foundation (6-3)
HAMMER-TOE

HA[s] (almost) + ME (Bobcat) installing MERTO[n] (college, without foundation)

5. Pipe music from the south pervades empty bar (5)
BRIAR

(AIR)< (music, <from the south) pervades B[a]R (empty)

6. Teach Dora about figures (9)
OCTAHEDRA

(TEACH DORA)* (*about)

7. Like a region of Australia – aiming high and all ignoring the odds? (5)
ZONAL

(OZ)< (Australia, <aiming high) + [a]N[d] A[l]L (ignoring the odds)

8. New York Times supports society spreading road stone (8)
SARDONYX

(NY (New York) + X (times)) supports (S (society) + (ROAD)* (*spreading))

14. Cycle needing Raleigh’s capital for development (9)
EVOLUTION

[r]EVOLUTION (cycle, needing R[aleigh] (capital))

15. Frequency of drink being served short in hostelry by church (9)
INCIDENCE

CIDE[r] (drink, being served short) in INN (hostelry) by CE (church)

16. Occasion for spinsters to be certified as bachelors? (6,3)
DEGREE DAY

Whimsical cryptic definition

17. Doctor prematurely restraining one in a cheerless way (8)
DREARILY

DR (doctor) + EARLY (prematurely) restraining I (one)

19. Depth charges ward off Bill (6)
ADVERT

D (depth) charges AVERT (ward off)

21. Meetings without prospects in Bury (5)
INTER

INTER[views] (meetings, without VIEWS (prospects))

22. He composed possibly the best part of Things to Come (5)
BLISS

Arthur Bliss composed Things to Come. BLISS (the best part of things to come)

See Cineraria’s comments below for a more interesting interpretation, essentially:

([po]SSIBL[y] (the best part of))* (*composed)

23. The fear of God (5)
PANIC

PAN-IC (of God)

15 comments on “Financial Times 17,941 by BOBCAT”

  1. Amoeba

    Really rather tricky, but fun. I nearly came a cropper on SARDONYX, as I had NYT, and it was only upon rereading that I thought of ONYX and the mathematical sense of ‘times’. QUODLIBET was also new to me, but with the crossers it made the most sense of the available options, albeit not a lot!

    Does ‘spinsters’ mean something I’m not thinking of? Or is it just that a spinster could, like anyone else, get a degree?

    Thanks both.

  2. Hovis

    Not sure if Bobcat is aware of this or not, but the word ‘panic’ actually derives from its ‘of Pan’ meaning.

  3. FrankieG

    23d: “PANIC adjective 1. a1586– Usually with capital initial. Of, relating to, characteristic of, or associated with the ancient Greek god Pan. Now rare.” Hi, Hovis@2
    [22d Sir Arthur BLISS (1891–1975 …)]

  4. Cineraria

    I had PANIC as double definition. I was not entirely sure what to make of DEGREE DAY, since that appears to have a scientific definition that has nothing to do with the clue, as far as I can tell. I get “bachelor’s degree,” and I guess the joke is the spinster/bachelor switch/misdirection??? For BLISS, I wondered whether an anagram was indicated from “the best part of” [po]SSIBL[y], but I am not sure I see an anagram there. Maybe some sort of &lit? Fun puzzle, regardless.

  5. Cineraria

    I meant to say “anagrind,” and maybe “composed” would work?

  6. allan_c

    We had very little trouble with this although we thought one or two clues a bit quirky, particularly for BLISS, which read almost like a straight GK clue. No problems with spinsters becoming bachelors, plenty of them could get a bachelor’s degree on DEGREE (or graduation) DAY.
    We thought we might be getting a pangram, but in the end were a few letters short.
    Thanks, Bobcat and Teacow.

  7. KVa

    Loved RATE OF EXCHANGE and DEGREE DAY.
    BLISS
    Cineraria@5
    That’s an interesting spot. Hope the setter sees this and clarifies.

    Thanks Bobcat and Teacow.

  8. Teacow

    Cineraria @4/5, I like your rather more concrete parsing!

  9. Rudolf

    My take on 22D is that, in addition to the whole clue providing a definition, as Teacow says, definitions are also provided by its parts, namely “He composed” and “possibly the best part of Things to Come?” (ie “bliss” in the sense of the best possible state after death). I don’t think there is an anagram there, since, as Cineraria says, there is no indicator.

  10. Autistic Trier

    I managed to get the top left hand corner but the rest of this was beyond me.

    I’ve never heard of 2D and how on earth people can figure out the definition and the clue in 4D is beyond me. Same goes for how on earth Merton is the college referenced. The world is full of colleges, so how on earth can people land on the right one? And supporter to me made me think of sporting supporters.

    I didn’t enjoy or learn anything from this one – which just underlines my Autism probably not that I need to be reminded of that.

  11. Autistic Trier

    What I mean in my post above is that some clues, to me, are just a jumble of words, which reduces the puzzle to a guessing game.

  12. E.N.Boll&

    Having completed this puzzle, I was unsure of some of the parsings. I looked forward to finding out, here on 15sqd, what the setter had cunningly beaten me with.
    OK.
    10(ac) ME = MOI. I didn’t spot that o-so-crafty use of the French version, so cleverly left unindicated.

    16(down) DEGREE DAY. Gosh….it seems to be an ironic pun, on spinsters becoming their male equivalents, on a day which ranks alongside GREEN PAINT.

    22(down) BLISS. My parsing, based on “the best part of things” and “to come”, wherein “possibly” indicates Definitions by Example, must be awry. I’ll get me coat.

    It’s a good puzzle, but not my bag.

    Rgds Cat & Cow

  13. Amoeba

    AT@10 I needed all the crossers to get 4D, and got to the answer before I understood how it worked (and particularly before I could work out which college!).

    I sometimes think of these clues as an exercise in ‘accounting’ for the different parts of the surface. So once I saw that ‘almost has’ was probably HA at the start, the definition had to be ‘supporter’s condition’. then the M_____E was ‘Bobcat’, which needed a college without its last letter. With HAM_E_-T_E, I thought of HAMMER-TOE, and the remaining letters did indeed give a college without its final letter. So I used the college to confirm the answer, rather than to reach the answer.

  14. Hovis

    Amoeba @13. Exactly my reasoning. I expect this is true for most solvers of this clue and applaud you for supplying the details.

  15. Rudolf

    EN Boll& @12
    Chambers English Dictionary entries:
    moi
    pronoun
    Me, often used facetiously in mock affectation, eg in the form of a question to express surprise at an allegation against one
    degree day
    noun
    1. A unit used in measuring the heating requirements in a building, ie a fall of one degree of heat in one day
    2. A day on which a university, college, etc formally awards academic degrees

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