Guardian Cryptic crossword No 29,951 by Pasquale

A nice puzzle – I particularly liked 10ac, 13ac, 7dn, and 8dn. Thanks to Pasquale

I think I have heard of 11ac/21ac BLUE JOHN before, but did have to look it up to fully understand the clue.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
5 GALOOT
Crude guy also accompanying prisoner on return (6)
definition: a clumsy or inept person

TOO=”also” plus LAG=slang for “prisoner”; all reversed/”on return”

6 MUTANT
Greek character with blemish, not one monstrous type? (6)
MU=Greek letter/character; plus TA-[I]-NT=”blemish” minus I=”one”
9 SNITCH
Steal money going round in school (6)
[edit to add, thank you to Crispy and other commenters who pointed out this was missing]
definition: SNITCH = pilfer = “Steal”
TIN=slang for “money” reversed/”going round” in SCH (short for “school”)
10 TOULOUSE
‘Ladies and Gentlemen’ perhaps heard in French city (8)
sounds like (“heard”): ‘two loos’ (two toilets, one for Ladies and one for Gentlemen, perhaps)
11, 21 BLUE JOHN
Sad saint may be found in Derbyshire cave (4,4)
definition: a rare mineral that can be found in the Blue John Cavern in Derbyshire [wiki]

BLUE=”Sad” + [saint] JOHN

12 DELECTABLE
Delicious cold food served after sign to remove something (10)
C [cold] + TABLE=”food”; after DELE=a proofreader’s instruction to delete/remove something
13 SYMPATHETIC
I tap my chest, animatedly commiserating (11)
anagram/”animatedly’ of (I tap my chest)*
18 VINTAGE CAR
Minister transporting a gent around in old vehicle (7,3)
VICAR=”Minister” around anagram/”around” of (a gent)*
21 BLUE JOHN
See 11
22 MARCUS AURELIUS
See 23
23, 22 MARCUS AURELIUS
What disturbs us – a mercurial US ‘emperor’ (6,8)
definition: a Roman emperor

anagram/”disturbs” of (us a mercurial US)*

24 DEFUSE
Brill employment brings ease (6)
definition: to defuse as in to reduce the tension in a situation

DEF=slang for ‘excellent’=”Brill”; plus USE=”employment”

25 GANESH
He sang about an Indian god (6)
anagram/”about” of (He sang)*
DOWN
1 FLUTTERY
Like something flapping – say, insect going round (8)
UTTER=”say”, with FLY=”insect” going round
2 NOSHED
Disciple upset before he had had some loaves and fishes? (6)
for definition, to nosh = to eat

SON=”Disciple”, reversed/”upset”; plus HED=he’d=”he had”

3 FURUNCLE
Sore member of the family hiding under something warm (8)
definition: a type of boil or sore on one’s skin

UNCLE=”member of the family” after/under FUR=”something warm”

4 TACOMA
Jazz fan turned up with old mum in American city (6)
CAT=”Jazz fan” reversed (turned up); plus O (old) + MA=”mum”
5 GENTLE
Intelligent leader – kind inside (6)
hidden inside [Intelli]-GENT LE-[ader]
7 TUSSLE
Union less troubled or fighting? (6)
TU (Trade Union) + anagram/”troubled” of (less)*
8 ATHLETICISM
Requirement to do well in heat? This climate is awful (11)
definition refers to a ‘heat’ or preliminary round in an athletics competition

anagram/”awful” of (This climate)*

14 PIGGIEST
I spit egg out, being most disgusting at the meal? (8)
anagram/”out” of (I spit egg)*
15 INJURIES
Damages home fitting panels below (8)
definition has “Damages” as a noun

IN=[at] “home” + JURIES=”panels”

16 PIQUED
Got to the top – said to be so offended (6)
sounds like (said to be): ‘peaked’=”Got to the top”
17 CHOUGH
Top of country house that’s horrible for bird (6)
definition: a type of bird in the crow family

top letter of C-[ountry] + HO (house) + UGH=exclamation of disgust=”that’s horrible”

19 TEEOFF
Be a swinger at the club, stripped to the waist? (3,3)
definition: to tee off is to make a swing while at the golf club

to have one’s TEE or T-shirt taken OFF = “stripped to the waist”

20 RAMEAU
Musician and artist married overlooking water abroad (6)
definition: a French composer

RA (Royal Academician, “artist”) + M (married) + EAU=”water” in French i.e. “abroad”

31 comments on “Guardian Cryptic crossword No 29,951 by Pasquale”

  1. Tomsdad

    Agree with manehi – a nice puzzle. FURUNCLE was new to me, but other than that all familiar, GANESH from my granddaughter’s cuddly toy, Used to live just over the Pennines from the BLUE JOHN mines, so almost a write-in. Liked 23,22 for obvious reasons and the definition of 8d as well. Thanks to Pasquale and manehi

  2. AP

    I enjoyed making fluttery progress through this one. It felt very anagram-heavy at the start but it turned out to be mere coincidence that I exhausted the whole supply early on; I work by grid design and enumeration rather than going in clue order.

    Being a Pasquale, there were a few where I had to cross fingers and hope: GALOOT, BLUE JOHN, TACOMA and RAMEAU. Alas I couldn’t come up with the FUR for FURUNCLE.

    I loved the incongruence of the playful word NOSHED in the biblical context of the surface, and enjoyed ATHLETICISM and TEE OFF because I was on to them early (though wouldn’t it be a swinger of the club at the ball?). I was also pleased to remember DEF[USE] from an earlier puzzle.

    A special mention for PIQUED for the misleading positioning of the soundalike indicator; and similarly for GENTLE for a less typical example that refutes the misconception that the definition must necessarily be found at the beginning or end of the clue.

    Thanks both

  3. Crispy

    Hi Manehi. You haven’t actually parsed SNITCH – you’ve just written the clue.

  4. michelle

    Gave up, could not finish – I failed to solved 9ac, 24ac as well as 1, 2, 19 down.

    New for me: FURUNCLE; the Blue John Cavern in Derbyshire; Rameau, Jean-Philippe (for 20d); GALOOT; DELE = delete (12ac)

    Favourites: ATHLETICISM, VINTAGE CAR.

    9ac I would parse as reverse of TIN =money in SCH=school. Def = steal.

  5. Staticman1

    Great fun but as usual with Pasquale I had to have my fingers crossed for GALOOT, FURUNCLE and SNITCH (in that context). Not hear of BLUE JOHN either but very fairly clued once the J was checked.

    Not helped by putting in MARCUS TIBERIUS (whoever he may be) from the checking letters. Had to actually do the anagram to correct it and get to the last one in PIQUED.

    Liked TEE OFF and VINTAGE CAR

    THANKS Pasquale and Manehi

  6. Amma

    Enjoyable (and hopefully uncontroversial) cryptic. I didn’t know GALOOT or FURUNCLE – both great words – and revealed a couple of answers. I was annoyed with myself for failing to get PIQUED as it’s a perfectly good clue and I like soundalikes.

  7. KVa

    Thanks Pasquale and manehi.

    BLUE JOHN (a minuscule point)
    Took ‘saint, maybe’ as JOHN and ‘found in…cave’ as the def.

  8. PhilB

    Agree with Amma @6. Had to go with a clue solver to get FURUNCLE . Also didn’t know def is brill. Showing my age I suspect.
    Apart from the words I didn’t know, it went in easily. I took too long to see GENTLE.

  9. KateE

    Some good giggles along the way, but too many unknowns.

  10. gladys

    I remembered GALOOT from corny cowboy stories, but nho a FURUNCLE (guessed the relative from analogy with CARBUNCLE, but ended up using a wordfinder for the FUR bit), and I’m not sufficiently down with the kids for def=brill. Son=disciple was unfamiliar, and I was surprised to find that PIGGIEST is an actual word.

    But an appreciative OUCH for TOULOUSE, and I liked the topical surface of MARCUS AURELIUS. Thanks Pasquale and manehi.

  11. Protase

    Typically well-constructed puzzle from the Don, with trademark sprinkling of rarities and a biblical reference.

    Luckily, there was nothing here that was completely unfamiliar, though I had a long search in the mental attic for FURUNCLE and GALOOT (LOI – I’ve only come across it in Arthur Ransome novels, which I haven’t read for many decades). BLUE JOHN was a write-in if you’ve been to that part of the Peak District, but probably mystifying otherwise. The mineral, fluorite aka fluorspar, is not itself especially rare – what is unusual is the bluish-purple veining.

    Favourites: NOSHED, ATHLETICISM, MARCUS AURELIUS (we can’t get away from references to the orange one).

    Thanks to Pasquale and manehi

  12. Nigel Stephens

    Snitch is very parsable (9a) but doesn’t really mean steal. I had this as snatch?

  13. AlanC

    Worth it just for GALOOT, a word frequently used by my dad. Reasonably straightforward although the grid looked scary at first. I also liked TOULOUSE, SYMPATHETIC, MARCUS AURELIUS, VINTAGE CAR, GENTLE and PIQUED. I agree with Nigel @12, that SNATCH seems better than SNITCH, which surely means to inform on someone. I doubt that this puzzle will cause the handbags of yesterday.

    Ta Pasquale & manehi.

  14. Petert

    The other thing I liked about MARCUS AURELIUS was the contrast between the surface and the famously Stoic emperor. I couldn’t decide between PIQUED and peaked.

  15. AlanC

    … although I see that it can also mean to steal. TILT along with FURUNCLE and CHOUGH. I presume the 4 letters at the bottom are accidental.

  16. Blaise

    Here in France it’s spelt FURONCLE so thanks to the crosser with TOULOUSE that one took me ages, even though it’s something I’ve experienced. BLUE JOHN cavern too, but that’s a happy memory…

  17. Balfour

    AlanC @13 GALOOT was a frequent feature of my father’s vocabulary too, and never having heard it south of Hadrian’s Wall, I have always thought of it as Scottish, It is not surprising, therefore, that it has currency also in the lexis of Protestant Northern Ireland.

  18. Hadrian

    Nice highlighting from AP#2 of Pasquale’s little touches of misdirecting brilliance. Never heard of GALOOT but I’m going to use it from now on, I know enough candidates.. Thank you P&m

  19. Vegiemarm

    A tough puzzle with some satisfying solves, but a decidedly preferable bottom half.

  20. Martin

    I was another snatcher, I wasn’t happy with the parsing but had never heard that meaning of SNITCH. Like AP @2, I also sensed an anagram fest that didn’t quite materialise.

    I am a former resident of La Ville Rose (Toulouse, nicknamed for its pinkish construction materials). My rugby-obsessed friends down there will be pleased that England seem nailed on to lose this weekend.

    Like Gladys @10 I knew GALOOT and needed help to complete FURUNCLE.
    DEF is not a blazingly cutting-edge term. Def Jam Recordings have had a string of major artists since 1984, some of them household names. The word makes me think of Eric B and Rakim’s global smash Paid in Full from 1987 which has the words “def with the record” repeated on a sample. Did I spot it? Not so much. Solved the clue though.

    Thanks Pasquale and manehi

  21. KVa

    SNITCH
    One of the meanings given is ‘steal’ in various dictionaries.

  22. Alastair

    SNITCH is TIN, money, in SCHool.

  23. DavidC

    Long ago school trips have left me with this information – which I hope still holds good!

    BLUE JOHN: one of the earth’s rarest minerals – found only in a small part of Derbyshire.

    The stone was largely worked in France … and the name thought to be derived from the French description of its blueish / yellowish colour …’Bleu Jaune’ …

    The mine / cavern is very much worth a visit …

  24. poc

    I smiled at 10a, which reminded me of the old joke about the French artist who had added an extension to his house. Two-loos Lautrec, if you must know.

  25. Layman

    Despite comments on the Guardian site, this felt tough, but at least I managed to complete it unlike his previous one. Quite a few jorums – GALOOT, BLUE JOHN, RAMEAU, CHOUGH. My favourites were MARCUS AURELIUS, PIQUED, GENTLE, NOSHED and MUTANT. Thanks Pasquale and manehi!

  26. Martin

    To subsequent posters, yes, I understood the parsing and definition of SNITCH by the time I posted @20. Maybe you were aiming to resolve the gap in the blog rather than replying to me.


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  28. Alphalpha

    Thanks both and a dnf. I had to reveal PIQUED, which was annoying, but felt a glow of self-satisfaction on solving CHOUGH.

  29. Robi

    It’s Pasquale, so he must start as he means to go on with the GALOOT jorum (for me). I also tried with small writing to fit carbUNCLE into 3D with FURUNCLE being another jorum. I guess ‘two loos’ must be a chestnut but I don’t remember it and i liked it. I also liked the gent in his VINTAGE CAR, the good anagrams for MARCUS AURELIUS and ATHLETICISM (nicely misleading heat in the surface), and the home panels seen by (IN)JURIES.

    Thanks Pasquale and manehi.

  30. James

    There’s only one loo in ladies and gentlemen

  31. Nakamova

    James @30 Ladies is one loo, Gentlemen is the other. I think GALOOT crossed the pond and became more common in the U.S. (at least during the 1920s-40s). A little less pejorative though, indicating big and clumsy rather than crude.

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