Guardian 29,957: Brummie

Quite a few helpful anagrams to get things going here, and not too many difficulties after that. Thanks to Brummie for the puzzle.

 
Across
8 OVERHAUL Halve our shuttle service (8)
(HALVE OUR)*
9 ANNEX Appropriate names acquired by a partner in the past (5)
Two N[ame]s in A EX (partner in the past)
10 EDGE Having no end to continental shelf is an advantage (4)
LEDGE (shelf) less [continenta]L
11 HEAT SHIELD Side with health arrangement for capsule protection? (4,6)
(SIDE HEALTH)* – a heat shield protects a space capsule during re-entry
12 INFIRM Accepted company is failing (6)
IN (accepted) + FIRM
14 APTITUDE Bent aide put off protecting territorial head (8)
T[erritorial] in (AIDE PUT)*
16 WEATHER Get through Don’s confiscated article (7)
THE (definite article) in WEAR (don, as clothes)
18 UNKEMPT Dishevelled, drunk, empty? Dry out! (7)
drUNK EMPTy less the outer DRY
21 HAIRGRIP Musical stagehand’s lock retainer (8)
HAIR (musical) + GRIP (stagehand, a title often seen in film credits)
23 OUTAGE Power failure abroad goes on a long time (6)
OUT (abroad) + AGE (a long time)
24 SCHEMATIST Diagram maker matches its bends (10)
(MATCHES ITS)*
26 SILK Lawyer – southern kind (4)
S + ILK – ilk doesn’t “really” mean kind: it’s a Scots word meaning “same”, but it’s pretty much a lost cause to insist on this
27 RIVEN Forced to dispose of top cut (5)
DRIVEN (forced) less its first letter. Some might think this would only work for a down clue, but “top” can mean something that comes first, so I think it’s ok
28 HAIRLESS Husband: stuffy, with nothing up top (8)
H[usband] + AIRLESS
Down
1 EVIDENCE King’s is turned by informer (8)
To Turn King’s EVIDENCE is to testify as an accomplice or informer
2,5 FREE PASS With which to get into a house, say on the house? (4,4)
Not sure, but I think this is just an extended definition, playing on two different uses of “house”
3 FATHOM Sound at heart if at home (6)
Hidden in iF AT HOMe (in fact the central letters, hence “at heart”)
4 FLEABAG Scruffy type’s flab spread with age (7)
(FLAB AGE)*
6 INDICTMENT Medic in ground with TNT charge (10)
(MEDIC IN TNT)*
7 EXILED Food shop with cross on top of entrance, elevated and barred (6)
Reverse of DELI + X (cross) + E[ntrance]
13 INTERWEAVE Engrave ‘swell’ over end of the combine? (10)
INTER (to bury, en-grave) + [th]E in WAVE (swell)
15 TIN EAR What can cause a failure to appreciate music? An organ can at first (3,3)
TIN (can) + EAR (organ)
19 PUGILISM Is lip/gum hurt by this activity? (8)
(IS LIP GUM)* &lit
20 UPRIGHT Piano makes you elated – just (7)
UP (elated) + JUST (right)
22 ACCORD Agreement to link air conditioning with cable (6)
AC + CORD
23 OBTAIN Get boat moving with current (6)
BOAT* + IN (current, as an adjective)
25 AIN’T To collapse after fellow’s gone is not common (4)
FAINT less F – AIN’T is an informal of “common” version of “is not”
26 SILD Fish is brought up by line at depth (4)
Reverse of IS + L + D

28 comments on “Guardian 29,957: Brummie”

  1. Bodycheetah

    Standard stuff from Brummie. Ticks for INTERWEAVE, WEATHER and FATHOM

    Shrug for FREE PASS

    Cheers A&B

  2. Dave Ellison

    I found this tough going, but on reading your blog, I cant really see why this should have been.

    Thanks Andrew and Brummie

  3. KVa

    Thanks Brummie and Andrew.

    FREE PASS
    I was thinking if there was more to the clue like our blogger.
    Arrived at the same conclusion: It’s an extended def/a cryptic CAD.

    EVIDENCE
    Didn’t know the usage. Had to Google.
    Liked the clue.

  4. Geoff Down Under

    I didn’t understand EVIDENCE, and still don’t. SILD was my unknown — my goodness, aren’t there a lot of fishes?

    Enjoyable and the right difficulty level for this little black duck.

  5. Crispy

    What Dave @2 said.

  6. Rich

    FREE PASS I read as a semi-cryptic double definitiony
    1. permission to enter c.f. Dracula “Welcome to my house! Enter freely and of your own will!”
    2. Liberty to take freely

    Needed to check what King’s Evidence meant and the NW was a bit of a word salad for me but it didn’t seem to stall me in the end.

  7. Wellbeck

    I agree with Dave E @2: looking back, I’m unsure why this felt such a slog while I was working my way through it.
    UNKEMPT and FATHOM were satisfying; I also liked HAIRLESS and the pleasingly succinct SILK.
    Thanks Andrew and Brummie

  8. Shirley

    Geoff Down Under @4 to turn King’s evidence is to give evidence for the prosecution when you have been one of the defendants in a trial.
    You get a reduced sentence, but you can often be the result of a revenge attack by your former accomplices

  9. michelle

    I failed to solve 3d and 11ac (apart from guessing the word SHIELD) and I could not parse 26d – because I incorrectly entered SOLE!

    1d is one of those types of clue/answers that takes me a bit longer than is necessary because for all my life until a few years ago, it was always a matter of turning Queen‘s evidence. I think that the only time I ever heard the phrase being used was in TV shows.

    Geoff@4 – yes, many types of fish! Almost as many as car brand names 😉

  10. DropBear

    I took (s)ilk to be as in “of that ilk” meaning like that/of that kind/type so was quite happy with it. But now I realise I never knew exactly what ilk meant on its own
    Still happy with the clue though

  11. Vegiemarm

    A bit of a toughie today, and ultimately beaten by a few at the end. INTERWEAVE and SILK were a highlight.

  12. ronald

    A notch up from the last two days, I really enjoyed this, the first few in from helpful anagrams. Particularly liked UNKEMPT, loi was INFIRM. Completed in two separate helpings about ten hours apart. Many thanks Brummie and Andrew…

  13. Clyde

    Like Dave Ellison@2, Crispy@5 and Wellbeck@7, I found this tricky but now I’m not sure why.

    Could it be that – compared with yesterday’s ALIA with its lovely smooth surfaces – some of the clues here were a little bit clunky? (The clues for INTERWEAVE and EXILED, for example.)
    That said, I really liked the clues for OBTAIN and PUGILISM.

    Thanks to both Brummie and Andrew.

  14. Robi

    The 8 anagrams helped things along. I liked the hidden UNKEMPT and FATHOM. I had to reveal WEATHER though. Two HAIRs in the grid. This is what the ODE has to say about ilk: Today ilk is used in phrases such as ‘of his ilk ’ and ‘of that ilk ’ to mean ‘type’ or ‘sort’. This sense arose out of a misunderstanding of the earlier, Scottish use in the phrase of that ilk, where it means ‘of the same name or place’. For this reason, some traditionalists regard the modern use as incorrect. It is, however, the only common current sense and is now part of standard English

    Thanks Brummie and Andrew.


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  16. Staticman1

    Had to reveal EVIDENCE in what was in spite of the numerous anagrams quite a tough Brummie puzzle.

    Liked HAIRLESS and TIN EAR

    Thanks Andrew and Brummie

  17. Martind

    Legal theme? Indictment,Silk, Evidence? Maybe not…..

  18. Lord Jim

    I think maybe the idea of the first “house” in 2,5 is to suggest a theatre, ie you get to see a show for nothing with a FREE PASS.

    This was good fun. UNKEMPT was very clever and PUGILISM was a great clue-as-definition.

    Many thanks Brummie and Andrew.


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  20. John MacNeill

    27A. The Greeks gave us a precedent for “top” = “initial letter”; hence “acronym”.

  21. ArkLark

    Lovely puzzle with so many anagrams! But high praise for UNKEMPT, INTERWEAVE and AINT.

    Thanks Brummie and Andrew

  22. Buddy

    Blissfully unaware that the relationship between “sound” and “fathom” was (and probably still is) one of synonymity. Clearly must spend more time measuring the depth of rivers.


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  24. Ace

    Well, I’m upside-down again today. I found this reasonably straightforward and yet still enjoyable. I wrote in EVIDENCE for 1D but couldn’t quite parse the grammar. In hindsight it’s clear enough.

    And as usual I had not heard of the fish, but the wordplay was clear enough, so I consider it fair game.


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  26. Nakamova

    I got stuck right away on OVERHAUL since “shuttle” didn’t seem like of anagram indicator. And I missed the crosser, EVIDENCE, since we don’t have a kin here [yet] in the U.S. But the rest went in smoothly.

  27. Balfour

    Shakespeare clearly understood FATHOM as signifying also a measure of terrestrial depth, so FATHOM and ‘sound’ are in an unusual ‘turf and surf’ juxtaposition when Prospero renounces his ‘rough magic’ at the end of The Tempest:

    … I’ll break my staff,
    Bury it certain fathoms in the earth,
    And deeper than did ever plummet sound
    I’ll drown my book.

  28. AlanC

    Very nice, EVIDENCE was first in but my ex-profession helped. Turning QE seems to have been around forever, so it was interesting to think about how things change, a bit like Roz extracting the Michael out of my beloved QPR/KPR (we broke lent last Saturday, thankfully). PUGILISM, INTERWEAVE and UNKEMPT were top of a long list.

    Ta Brummie & Andrew.

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