Guardian Quick Cryptic 108 by Ludwig

This week’s 11 x 11 crossword from the Guardian intended to teach cryptic crosswords, found here

This week’s puzzle is the 15th puzzle by Ludwig, who originally appeared as a tie in with the TV Show, but has since set a number of Quick Cryptic, Quiptic and Cryptic puzzles. The first puzzles were acknowledged to be a collaboration between Alan Connor (Guardian crossword editor/Everyman) and Enigmatist. Since then the crossword blog (written by Alan Connor) has said that there have been a number of different collaborations. In this puzzle we have anagrams and alternate letters where all the letters are present, plus double definitions and dropped letters where the solvers have to find the words.

The whole point of these crosswords is support and encouragement of new solvers, so special rules for these crosswords apply – see here – those rules include not posting solving times.

This blog was developed in response to suggestions. We hide the answers and the wordplay descriptions (parsing) too.   To find the solution click on “Answer” and to find how the word play works, click on “Parsing” which will reveal the hidden information. You can choose to reveal everything using the “Expand All” button. If you have partially revealed the page, refreshing it will clear that, and allow you to expand all. The definition is in bold and underlined, the indicator is in red.

For additional help click here

There is a summary of the tricks used in the first six months here and a Guardian Crossword blog called the ultimate beginner’s guide has tips which may be useful for some solvers.

 

For abbreviations and clue tips click here

Fifteen Squared uses several abbreviations and jargon tricks, there’s a full list here, of which I’ve used the following in this blog:

  • underlining the definition in the clue – this is either at the beginning or end of the clue
  • indicators are in red.
  • CAPITALS to indicate which bits are part of the answer, e.g. haVE ALtered for the example.
  • anagram – letters being used shown in brackets (SENATOR)* for the clue below to give TREASON.
  • anagrind – anagram indicator – in the case below it is “arranged”
  • soundalike – is indicated by “Wilde” – so in the example, Oscar “Wilde”, the playwright and author, is indicating the soundalike WILD.
  • charades – the description below only gives the example of words being added together, but charades can be more complicated, adding abbreviations or single letters to another word.  Examples previously used in this series are: Son ridicules loose overgarments (6) S (son) + MOCKS (ridicules), Get rid of dead pine (5) D(dead) + ITCH (pine) – D ITCH, and early on DR (doctor) + IVE (I have) to give DRIVE.
  • reversals – the reversal element of a clue is indicated by < – so in the example clue below, VieTNAm <.
  • CAD or clue as definition– where the whole clue gives the definition, sometimes called an &lit. These are rare.
  • DBE or definition by example – e.g. where a dog might be clued as a setter – often using a question mark, maybe, possibly or e.g. to show that this is an example rather than a definition.
  • surface – the meaning from reading the clue – so often cryptic clues use an English that could only be found in a cryptic crossword, but a smooth surface is a clue that has a meaning in English, which can be pointed or misleading.

TODAY’S TRICKS – from the crossword site – because the clues have moved on from the clue descriptions below, I am now adding more to the descriptions hidden above. Clues begin or end with a definition of the answer. The rest is one of these:

  1. Anagram Anagram of answer and hint that there’s an anagram
    ‘Senator arranged crime (7)’ gives TREASON – (SENATOR)* arranged
  2. Double definition Both halves are definitions!
    ‘Search scrub (5)’ gives SCOUR
  3. Alternate letters Choose every other letter for answer
    ‘Oddly £nViEd First Lady? (3)’ gives EVE
  4. Dropped letter Remove a letter from another word
    ‘Time away from coach in wet weather (4)’ gives RAIN from tRAIN (coach).

ACROSS Click on “Answer” to see the solutions
1
Somehow outstare fish (3,5)
Answer

SEA TROUT

Parsing

anagram of (OUTSTARE)* with an anagrind of “somehow” – one of Everyman’s trademark clues, a single word anagram here.

7
Brownish coach-horse intermittently falling (5)
Answer

OCHRE

Parsing

alternate letters (intermittently falling) of cOaCh HoRsE – intermittently falling suggests letters disappearing occassionally, so is suggesting alternate letters. (Alternate letters do not have to be every other letter, there was a full fat cryptic this week where the alternate letters were every 4th letter, and I’ve seen every 3rd.)

8
Radiator perhaps lacking energy: I’m full of bile (5)
Answer

HATER

Parsing

drop a letter (lacking energy) from HeATER (radiator perhaps). Lacking energy is an instruction to drop an E, E = energy in scientific abbreviations. Radiator perhaps, because it’s a DBE (definition by example) – a radiator is one example of a heater.

9
Quorate knitting circle (7)
Answer

EQUATOR

Parsing

anagram of (QUORATE)* with an anagrind of “knitting” – I think the surface is suggesting that a knitting circle / knit & natter group should have a quorum.

10
Monster appearing every so often: correct! (3)
Answer

ORC

Parsing

alternate letters (appearing every so often) in cOrReCt for one of Tolkein’s monsters.

11
Overweight? Avoid food, not having seconds (3)
Answer

FAT

Parsing

drop a letter (not having seconds) from FAsT (avoid food). “Not having seconds” is an instruction to remove s – the SI (scientific) unit for time,

12
Senior church figure’s an ape? (7)
Answer

PRIMATE

Parsing

double definition – this is a regular in cryptic crosswords, where these varying meanings from the same word are often used to mislead. Adding in later, here is the senior church figure and here is the ape.

14
German name for German flower in her rocks (5)
Answer

RHEIN

Parsing

anagram of (IN HER)* with an anagrind of “rocks”. The convoluted definition is because the English spelling varies from the German, and we need the German. We’ve also got one of the regular full-fat crossword tricks – a river is often defined as a “flower” because it flows, or a “banker” because it runs between banks.

16
Runs away from seaside areas in sandals? (5)
Answer

SHOES

Parsing

drop a letter (runs away) from SHOrES (seaside areas) with a question mark to show it is definition by example (DBE), just one example of the solution. R is a cricketing abbreviation for “runs”, so “runs away” means remove “r”.

17
Performances arranged, it’s clear (8)
Answer

RECITALS

Parsing

anagram of (IT’S CLEAR)* with an anagrind of “arranged”.

DOWN
2
Drain pipe (7)
Answer

EXHAUST

Parsing

double definition with one a verb meaning wear out / drain and the other a houn, a specific pipe.

3
Oddly, a three-part reward given to lab? (5)
Answer

TREAT

Parsing

alternate letters (oddly) from ThReE-pArT the lab in the definition is a labrador dog not, as suggested, a laboratory.

4
Second parent, not married (5)
Answer

OTHER

Parsing

drop a letter (not married) from mOTHER (parent). Not married is an instruction to drop “m”, an abbreviation from genealogy.

5
I disapprove when trust regularly breached (3)
Answer

TUT

Parsing

alternate letters (regularly breached) from TrUsT. The solution is an expression of disapproval.

6
(Tax divisions) (8)
Answer

BRACKETS

Parsing

double definition the usual rule with cryptic crosswords is ignore all punctuation, until you don’t. This is one of these examples when the punctuation isn’t there to make sense of the surface, but is part of the clue. In this case it is one of the two definitions.

7
Attack the enemy, that’ll keep you warm (4,4)
Answer

OPEN FIRE

Parsing

double definition one being the instruction to “attack the enemy”, the other a description of someothing that will keep you warm, possibly – not the most efficient or cleanest heating system.

10
Where Lancashire may be found enjoying repeated wins (2,1,4)
Answer

ON A ROLL

Parsing

double defintion the first is playing with Lancashire coming to my mind as a cheese type. The other is a description of someone on a winning streak – see here. When I googled for this, I found a number of sandwich shops and businesses called this.

12
Alarm as sprains itch periodically (5)
Answer

PANIC

Parsing

alternate letters (periodically) of sPrAiNs ItCh.

13
Part of map where creepy-crawly’s not about (5)
Answer

INSET

Parsing

drop a letter (not about) from INSEcT (creepy-crawly) in this case we are dropping C, about, (not about) from INSEcT. C for about comes from the Latin circa, and appears as c or ca. Adding in later, the answer appears on lots of British maps, see here as a way to include some of the outlying islands.

15
Are changes coming to The Listener? (3)
Answer

EAR

Parsing

anagram of (ARE)* with an anagrind of “changes”. This surface is referring to the much lamented Listener magazine with the famed crossword – which still continues as commented on in the Wikipedia article (and blogged on fifteen squared).

7 comments on “Guardian Quick Cryptic 108 by Ludwig”

  1. michelle

    New for me: PRIMATE=bishop.

    Favourite: BRACKETS.

  2. Amma

    Good to have some practice with dropped letter clues. I found this mostly straightforward though INSET took a while and I didn’t pick up on Lancashire as a cheese. I could see 10d was a double definition but not why Lancashire would be ON A ROLL. Thanks Shanne.

  3. Paula

    Tough for me today. Not up on Catholic religion so Primate was new to me. I couldn’t see what Rhein meant and still not sure why inset is part of map?

  4. michelle

    Paula@3 – an inset is a map within a map – this is one example
    https://gisgeography.com/inset-maps/

  5. thecronester

    I found this very tricky this morning especially the double defs and 6d was last one in, a doh! moment when the penny dropped after I had all the crossers. Thanks Shanne for your blog, and to Ludwig for the neat puzzle.

  6. Shanne

    Sorry Paula @3 I have added in an illustration in the blog, but most British maps have insets for the Shetland Islands, and quite often the Orkneys, it’s not the only use, but it’s common. Sometimes it’s scale – Cornish maps often show the Scillies at a different scale.

    The River Rhine is spelled Rhein as it goes through German speaking countries. so is something that flows through Germany – a German flower, spelt the German way.

    I’ve added links to the primate definitions, but it’s another word for Bishops in the CofE, not just Catholic Bishops – and it comes from the Latin, the same root as prime and primacy to indicate leaders.

  7. Sarah

    Found this one quite hard and had to cheat a few because I was totally stumped!

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