Financial Times 18,080 by SOLOMON

A tough one from SOLOMON this Friday.

FF: 8 DD: 10 ( i cant parse the answer to the penultimate across clue )

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 DEATH
The fringes of aged, fraying curtains (5)

[ THE AD ( AgeD, end letters ) ]*

4 BALLCOCKS
Bravery overtakes one tending to call early, and they re-raise with a flush (9)

BALLS ( bravery ) containing COCK ( one tending to call early )

9 RETARDANT
Revolutionary soldier carrying sticky road covering that slows progress (9)

[ RED ( revolutionary ) ANT ( soldier ) ] containing reverse of TAR ( sticky road covering )

10 NICER
Having lost a kilo, kleptomaniac is looking better (5)

NICkER ( kleptomaniac, without K – kilo )

11 SIR
Say, Anthony Hopkins is returning with part 4 of Thor (3)

[ reverse of IS ] R ( thoR, 4th letter )

12 IDENTIFYING
Spotting one about to go without English books provided (11)

[ I ( one ) DYING ( about to go ) ] outside [ E ( english ) NT ( books ) IF ( provided ) ]

13 PROCESSED
Refined editor backs journalists closing in on Cuba’s leaders (9)

[ PRESS ( journalists ) containing OC ( "..On Cuba..", first letters ) ] ED ( editor )

15 ROAST
Cook clobbered rats around the back of gazebo (5)

[ RATS ]* around O ( gazebO, last letter )

17 RUN UP
Approach chicken enclosure in an excited state (3-2)

RUN ( chicken enclosure ) UP ( in an excited state )

19 INSTANTLY
Unpredictably, prisoner escapes straight away (9)

INconSTANTLY ( unpredictably, without CON – prisoner )

21 BELLY DANCER
One of the movers and shakers working with a dynamic corporation (5,6)

cryptic def

24 FIT
Solomon wears this suit (3)

I ( solomon ) in FT ( this )

26 NOVEL
Volume penned by Fielding? (5)

V ( volume ) in NOEL ( fielding, english comedian ) ; is volume both part of clue and def, or should the whole clue be marked for def?

27 THE MATRIX
Film location settled on by Cats’ heads of research in Xanadu (3,6)

THE MAT ( location settled on by cats ) RIX ( starting letters of "..Research In Xanadu" )

28 HORNPIPES
Add cream inside cream cakes for dances (9)

i could use help here; i think part of the wordplay is P in PIES ( cakes ) but cant figure out why HORN could mean add.

29 YO-YOS
Special, timeless playthings getting spun (2-3)

S ( special ) [ tOY tOY ( playthings, without T – time ) ], all reversed

DOWN
1 DARTS
Individuals aiming to get on the board of Dutch craft society (5)

D ( dutch ) ART ( craft ) S ( society )

2 AFTERNOON
PM Johnson may have placed noose here (9)

cryptic def; location in dictionary for NOOSE , it would come AFTER NOON

3 HEROINE
Subject of 26, say, or of Trainspotting — drugs? (7)

HEROIN ( drug ) E ( drug ) ; is the reference to trainspotting something to do with heroin too?

4 BLAZE
Brilliance of Pascal pronounced (5)

sounds like BLAISE ( pascal )

5 LATITUDES
Lines on a map situated roughly south of Lima (9)

L ( Lima, nato alphabet ) [ SITUATED ]*

6 CONIFER
Development of fir cone? (7)

&lit; [ CONE FIR ]*

7 CACTI
Rubbish hamper delivered for those with water retention (5)

sounds like CACK ( rubbish ) TIE ( hamper )

8 SPRIGHTLY
Lively and astute guards quietly stand up (9)

SLY ( astute ) containing [ P ( quietly ) RIGHT ( ~ stand up ) ]

13 PARK BENCH
Leave car beside mountain overlooking church and stop there for a rest (4,5)

PARK ( leave car ) BEN ( mountain ) CH ( church )

14 SPINAL TAP
Rock group’s means of reaching LA? Dancing? (6,3)

SPIN AL ( reverse clue, to generate LA ) TAP ( dancing ) ; didnt know this and needed google help

16 ARTY FARTY
Pretentious fellow breaks two plastic trays (4-5)

F ( fellow ) in ( [ TRAY ]* twice )

18 PAYSLIP
Note accompanying wages of 51p supporting secretaries across year (7)

[ PAS ( secretaries ) containing Y ( year ) ] LI ( 51, roman numerals ) P

20 ALREADY
Even now, before the breaking of day, 10% of leafleters are outside (7)

[ ARE containing L ( 10% of Leafleters ) ] [ DAY ]*

22 LOVER
O, Romeo… Romeo? (5)

LOVE ( O ) R ( Romeo )

23 CHEWS
Sweets! Charlie saw sweets at last! (5)

C ( charlie ) HEW ( saw ) S ( sweetS, last letter )

25 TAXES
Rates of temperature shown by lines on a chart (5)

T ( temperature ) AXES ( lines on a chart )

17 comments on “Financial Times 18,080 by SOLOMON”

  1. 28 across is to ‘pipe’ ie, add cream, inside ‘horns’ so named after the shape of the cream puffs, I think.

  2. I parsed HORNPIPES as Steven. Plenty to like: BALLCOCKS, RUN UP, FIT, NOVEL (I think it’s an &lit?), LATITUDES, PARK BENCH, ARTY FARTY, ROMEO and TAXES. A rare query on a Solomon puzzle: is HEW a synonym of saw? All the definitions for HEW in Chambers specify the use of blows.

    Thanks Solomon and Turbolegs

  3. HORNPIPES
    Ditto as others
    NOVEL
    Took it as an &lit (like PM@2)
    HEROINE
    Trainspotting: A movie
    YO-YOS
    Meant to be an &lit, I think.

    Thanks Solomon and Turbolegs

  4. Absolutely loved this. I assumed ‘hew’ just meant ‘cut’, so ‘saw’ seemed fine but, after reading PostMark’s comment, I’m not so sure now.

  5. Thanks Solomon and Turbolegs

    23dn: This is tricky. Like Hovis@4, I took hew=saw on trust while solving, but PM@2 has raised doubts.

    ODE 2010 p 823 gives us hew verb 1 with these two definitions:
    chop or cut (something, especially wood or coal) with an axe, pick, or other tool.
    make or shape by cutting a hard material: a seat hewn out of a fallen tree trunk.

    Collins 2023 p 921 gives us
    1 to strike (something, esp wood) with cutting blows, as with an axe
    2 (tr; often foll by out) to shape or carve from a substance
    3 (tr; often foll by away, down, from, off, etc) to sever from a larger or another portion.

    The first definition in each of these clearly excludes sawing, but I am not at all clear in my mind whether that exclusion extends to the later definitions. I will content myself with presenting the available evidence and will let others draw their own conclusions.

  6. I managed to finish, but the last thing I would describe the puzzle as was enjoyable.

    I’m happy it pleased some, but for me there were far too many unparsed or puzzling answers, too much general knowledge (eg two unknown Christian names) and too many where are got the answer from the definition, and then spent ages trying to work out the cryptic bit.

    Isn’t 10% of a word (leafleters)is poor indicator what letter one has to select? What about 5% of a 20 letter word? Maybe I’m missing something here.? Or am I supposed to know it’s the first letter? Rather like “a bit of”

    Re 2d, presumably Johnson would also have placed Zebra here?

    Well done with the blog!

  7. Thanks for the blog a lot of clever wordplay and definitions , BALLCOCKS has both aspects , SPINAL TAP is very neat although a fictional group originally .
    The novel Trainspotting is mainly about heroin and its users etc plus a big deal at the end .
    NOVEL , some say the modernish form invented by Henry Fielding .
    I would say sawing involves an insfrument with teeth .

  8. Liked ROAST, CHEWS, LOVER, PARK BENCH

    I usually like Solomon a lot, but I was not overly enthusiastic about this puzzle. I remember his puzzles as being full of accurately worded clues with neat surfaces. While I agree with Moly@6, what did it for me was the neat surfaces have largely disappeared. While I got a few of the references (SPINAL TAP, HEROINE), I believe most of them were lost on me. If only I were a Scotsman in his fifties.

    Thanks Solomon and Turbolegs

  9. Thanks to Soloman and Turbolegs,
    I solved this rapidly (for me).I am surprised at the DD rating of 10.

  10. Thanks Solomon. I eventually revealed the nho HORNPIPES, CACTI with its stretchy definition, and ALREADY with its suspect 10%. Gripes aside I thought this was an overall excellent crossword with ticks going to DEATH, NICER, BELLY DANCER, NOVEL, DARTS, SPINAL TAP, ARTY-FARTY, and LOVER. Thanks Turbolegs for the blog.

  11. Good on you, Ken F@12. It is an endless fascination for me how some puzzles click for people and not others. I thought it was quite difficult in places.

  12. A stiffish challenge but it was all getteble, albeit if we didn’t see some of the parsings till afterwards. And we share others’ reservations about ‘hew’ for ‘saw’.
    But there was plenty to like, including RETARDANT, THE MATRIX, CACTI and SPINAL TAP – plus what was almost our LOI after a delayed penny-drop: AFTERNOON, referencing Samuel rather than Bojo.
    Thanks, Solomon and Turbolegs.

  13. Like Turbolegs I found this to be very chewy. That clue, 23d, brought to mind Beyond the Fringe’s description of the variety of activities you get down the mines.

    My favourite was 8d LATITUDES, for the beautifully hidden anagram in the excellent surface.

    Thanks Solomon for the fun, and Turbolegs for the excellent and much-needed blog.

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