A new proprietor, a new interactive interface, but the same reliable Azed. It feels as if there are fewer familiar words than usual, but despite that I managed to fill the grid fairly quickly. On the other hand, some of the parsing was a bit tricky, with 32 down proving elusive until the 11th hour. Thanks to Azed for the puzzle, and best wishes to those attending the lunch in Oxford today yesterday, which I’m I was sadly unable to attend on this occasion.
| Across | ||||||||
| 1 | ORTHOPTIST | One modifying poor sight, not good, with start and finish of treatment? (10) Anagram of POOR SIGHT less G, plus T[reatmen]T, &lit |
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| 12 | ARENARIA | Rain tumbled inside piece of ground for chickweed relative (8) RAIN* in AREA |
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| 13 | POISHA | Small change in Bangladesh I spotted entering expensive area (6) I in POSH A |
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| 14 | SURAT | Coarse cotton universal in sailors making comeback (5) U in reverse of TARS |
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| 15 | INDOL | What’s in indigo icon? Little new in that (5) N[ew] in IDOL |
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| 16 | NECROSE | Pink after kiss mostly? Show interruption of blood supply? (7) NEC[k] + ROSE |
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| 17 | SEAN | What fisherman casts? His medium number (4) SEA (fisherman’s “medium”) + N – variant of Seine, a type of fishing net |
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| 20 | TICO | Simple game in US? Lacking tact for Central American (4) TIC-TAC-TO (US name of noughts and crosses, more usually spelled tic-tac-toe) less TACT |
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| 22 | ACCEPTER | Trained pacer, etc – one that’s sure to run (8) (PACER ETC)* – presumably the one that’s sure to run is one who has accepted a nomination in a (US) election |
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| 24 | IGNITION | Number one bell I turned? It often requires a key (8) Reverse of NO I TING I |
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| 25 | VERA | An occupant of the pulpit rerunning tape recorder? (4) Reverse of A REV |
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| 28 | OAFS | They’re dim-witted on account of extremes of fatuousness (4) OA (on account of) +F[atuousnes]S |
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| 30 | BAGARRE | Quantity of drugs fit to be nicked, not stable, in Parisian rumpus (7) BAG (quantity of drugs) + ARRE[stable] |
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| 31 | MARAH | Bitter banned for Muslims? Send it back (5) Reverse of HARAM |
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| 33 | INURN | Bury ma you’ll find thus in the forest swamp (5) MA IN URN would give UMARN, which is a swampy pine forest |
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| 34 | BORAGE | Salad veg displaying strong smell inspired frenzy (6) BO + RAGE |
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| 35 | TITRATES | Measures strength of obligations limiting eaterie (8) TRAT in TIES |
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| 36 | SILENTNESS | Restationed sentinels succeeded in remaining inaudible (10) SENTINELS + S[ucceeded] |
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| Down | ||||||||
| 2 | RHONE | Strand, the same after its centre is out of reach (5) R[eac]H + ONE (the same) |
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| 3 | TRIDACNA | Giant bivalve shrivelled in acid tarn (8) (ACID TARN)* |
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| 4 | HUSO | Large fish, not useful, stored in hold (4) U/S in HO |
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| 5 | PRANG | Crash resounded after parking (5) P + RANG |
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| 6 | TEDESCO | German/Italian deploying some French in supermarket (7) DE (French “some”) in TESCO. This is the word that “perhaps surprisingly” is not given by Chambers. This note is only visible in the PDF, not in the interactive version. |
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| 7 | INSCIENT | Isn’t muddled about cine abroad, ignorant no longer (8) CINE* in ISNT* – I caused myself problems by carelessly entering NESCIENT for this |
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| 8 | SAURY | Sea fish, salty when not left inside (5) SAVOURY (salty) less VO (verso, left-hand page in a book) |
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| 9 | DIASTER | Stage in dividing cells, calamity when section’s removed (7) DISASTER less one S |
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| 10 | GATECRASHER | E.g. cat toyed with bit of breakfast, sort of interloper (11) (EG CAT)* + RASHER (of bacon) |
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| 11 | EPISTILBITE | Part of flower below earth to penetrate mineral (11) E[arth] + PISTIL + BITE |
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| 18 | MATERNAL | A bird gripped by sickness of parent (8) A TERN in MAL |
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| 19 | STEARAGE | Floor grabbing attraction in government as of old (8) EAR in STAGE |
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| 21 | IGUANID | Lizard weapon cut short in India, wild (7) GU[n] in INDIA* |
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| 23 | CIRRATE | Irish stored in packing case, cloudy after a fashion (7) IR in CRATE |
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| 26 | MARRI | Flowery tree in bed, not mature (5) MARRIAGE (bed) less AGE |
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| 27 | HEBEN | Shrubby plant, name for hard old wood (5) HEBE (shrubby plant) + N – an old form of “ebony” |
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| 29 | FAGUS | Work hard on American tree family (5) FAG + US |
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| 32 | ARAN | Like some woollies, in parts they came undone (4) A (dialect form of “they”, i.e. used “in parts” of the country) + RAN (came undone, as in stitches) |
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To give EAR in STEARAGE, it seems attention (definition 4 of ear in C2016) would be better than attraction which make me think it’s a typo.
I thought that ACCEPTER was a horse-racing term, but Chambers only has that sense under ACCEPTOR, and doesn’t define ACCEPTER at all.
I was lucky enough to be able to attend the celebratory lunch yesterday and will post a report later.
Yes bridgesong@2, the horse racing “acceptor” seems also more in keeping with the clue surface so maybe another glitch.
Found this on the trickier side mainly due to the number of obscure words, but even so it came together nicely. “They” for “a” as dialect is one to remember and I note it can be he, she, it or they.
I enjoyed the new interactive interface.
Thanks for the blog , I have the same points underlined . Agree with Tim@1 for EAR , should be attention , and with Bridgesong@2 for -OR .
For REVA does “rerunning” mean returning ? I think it means the same direction twice .
MARRI is not in Chambers93 and has bed=marriage two weeks in a row and still dubious .
Nice to be able to attempt this interactively: one of the few advantages of the Observer site. Defeated by SEAN, RHONE, VERA (all unsolved), MARRI (I had KARRI, another flowery tree that doesn’t parse) CIRRATE (I had CITRATE). Took a long time to realise the fish wasn’t HUSS.
As promised, here’s a report from yesterday’s lunch, along with some answers to questions and comments posed on the Azed/Everyman thread which I have been given by our contact at The Observer.
The lunch was well attended, with around 86 guests, very similar to the one a few years ago to celebrate the 50th anniversary. Normally these lunches are held every five years when a numerical milestone is reached, but of course it wasn’t possible to hold one in 2020 (for the 2500 edition). Among the guests who spoke at the lunch were The Guardian crossword editor (and Everyman setter) Alan Connor and The Times puzzle editor Mick Hodgkin. Other guests included John Henderson (Enigmatist) and several other setters.
We were fortunate that the good weather lasted so that we could enjoy drinks on the lawn at Wolfson College, followed by lunch in the hall, and we then proceeded the short distance to Azed’s home where tea and cakes were enjoyed in the garden.
There was one reference during the lunch to the controversy over the second prize winning clue to 2,750. Jim Vincent, who co-authored the clue in question, delivered a poetic tribute to Azed and in his introductory remarks mentioned his embarrassment at having misunderstood the requirements of the competition, to be compounded by greater embarrassment when his clue was awarded the second prize! Azed himself made no mention of the incident, as far as I could tell (the PA system broke down quite early in the speeches, so those of us at a distance from the top table struggled to hear everything that was said).
It’s clear that the transition to new ownership has presented challenges to all those involved. Although the person primarily responsible for the publication of the crossword puzzles in the printed paper is the same, and has worked with Azed for a decade, yesterday was the first time that they had actually met in person! By contrast, the team responsible for the web version of The Observer is wholly new and is “under significant pressure to understand complex systems – crosswords included”. Last week there was initially no obvious route to find the puzzles on the website, but that was swiftly remedied after it was pointed out. The online experience was an improvement on what had gone before, in that it is now possible to complete the puzzle online. The inclusion of a “submit” button on the Azed puzzle was apparently an error. Unfortunately, as I write this, today’s puzzle – a competition one – has yet to appear on the website. Ken and I have been in touch with our contact to point this out and I expect that it will be there before too long.
Agree with Roz@5 on all points. Chambers ’98 does give TEDESCO (wonder when it was dropped?), but not MARRI or POISHA. I found this a bit harder than the last few weeks, especially the left hand side (unknown words like Epistilbite, Tridacna, Poisha, Tico were hard to get without the inter-crossing letters!), but persistence paid off.
Today’s puzzle is now up on the Observer site.
MunroMaiden@8 I just checked TEDESCO and it is in C93 , did not bother last week because of the note . POISHA I checked in our Atlas which is very good for currencies .
Well done Gladys@6 , you will find that Azed gets easier with practice .
Thanks Bridgesong@7 , fortunately I can ignore all the IT stuff but I imagine it is not at all easy taking over a whole online operation . The paper today has tidied up the issue with winners . 2755 winning clues are shown , the winners shown last week are for 2756 , they have been moved below the grid , maybe this week only ? I prefer the name and address space below the grid for sending off , very small problem .
Tried this for the first time and was happy enough to fill most in the north and everything in the NW plus IGNITION, INURN, IGUANID, MATERNAL, MARRI, FAGUS and SILENTNESS. Considered VERA, TICO and STEARAGE from their clues but couldn’t confirm they are actual words or fit the definitions (“tape recorder”??). Thought about RHONE, too, but couldn’t parse it. In retrospect, quite a few were rather “gettable”, but well… TEDESCO was actually a write-in, for German in Italian, with Tesco and “de”. All in all, it was OK, methinks 🙂
Belated comment having had no time yesterday. Also found left side hard but got there in the end. Submit button on line raised hopes that one might be able to send by email instead of snail mail. I was at the party excellent except for being unable to hear the speeches many thanks are due to the organisers and especially to Azed and Alison for entertaining so many people to tea
Here’s VERA the tape recorder – new to me as well, though actually pretty old.
Too busy yesterday to join in. Thanks Bridgesong for snap of the Oxford do. I have been at every one of Azed’s earlier celebrations and Zoomed into this one. I do recommend always having a non-participant Director to improve the experience for viewers. Panning to show audience, ensuring that mikes are close to mouths, muting the folk “along the top” One of my fellow viewers was playing his guitar unmuted, another only appeared as a “headless horseman”
As a consequence of my mini-stroke I thought I would be unable to tackle Azed so you can imagine my joy when I finished 2758 yesterday. Wish me luck on 2759.
Good luck Keith, I could do with some myself this week.