Everyman 4,151

The puzzle may be found as a pdf at https://www.tinyurl.com/Everyman4151.

Maybe not my favourite Everyman, but with the usual hallmarks: the rhyming pair at 2D BRICKS-AND-MORTAR and 7D GET INTO HOT WATER (passing over the near miss at 8A and 22A); the self reference at 5A DOTAGE, the geographical reference at 15A ANDORRA, and the ‘primarily’ clue at 14A UNICORN, all highlighted in the grid. There is no one-word anagram this time.

ACROSS
1 ABOARD
Ace meals on a ship (6)
A charade of A (‘ace’) plus BOARD (‘meals’ – “bed and board”).
5 DOTAGE
You shouldn’t have got into setter, perhaps Everyman’s beginning to show feebleness (6)
An envelope (‘have got into’) of TA (‘you shouldn’t have’ – giving thanks for a gift, say) in DOG (‘setter, perhaps’) plus E (‘Everyman’s beginnng’).
8 INK-BLOT TEST
Startled kittens bolt in psych procedure (3-4,4)
An anagram (‘startled’) of ‘kittens bolt’.
11 MAKE A WISH
Birthday announcement pathetic, a mawkish constant (4,1,4)
An anagram (‘pathetic’) of ‘a mawkish’ plus E (‘constant’ – lower case e is generally used to denote the constant Euler’s number, the base of natural logarithms; Euler’s constant is a quite different number. Got that?)
12 ACNED
Spotty old hat for a Cockney (5)
An h-dropping ‘Cockney’ might confuse the answer with HACKNEYED (‘old hat’).
13 GRANDPA
He’s related Greek saga’s finale including, additionally, prince (7)
An envelope (‘including’) of AND (‘additionally’) plus P (‘prince’) in GR (‘Greek’) plus A (‘sagA‘s finale’).
14 UNICORN
Unlisted (not indexed) company offering riches nowadays, primarily? (7)
First letters (‘primarily’) of ‘Unlisted Not Indexed Company Offering Ritches Nowadays’, with an &lit definition referring to a startup company which has reached a valuation of US $1 billion while remaining in private ownership – maybe not quite as rare as unicorns.
15 ANDORRA
Part of Finland – or, rather, another country (7)
A hidden answer (‘part of’) in ‘FinlAND OR RAther’.
17 TEDIOUS
Wearisome after time, editor with promises of payment (7)
A charade of T (‘time’) plus ED (‘editor’) plus IOUS (‘promises of payment’).
20 DROLL
On reflection, Liberal parliamentarian is amusing (5)
A reversal (‘on reflection’) of L (‘Liberal’) plus LORD (‘parliamentarian’ in the other house)
21 OUTGROWTH
How gut-rot’s provoked? (9)
An anagram (‘provoked’?) of ‘how gut-rot’ with a rather stretched &lit definition.
22 TAXIDERMIST
Stuffy type occupied with relics of the past? (11)
Cryptic definition.
23 FRIDAY
Good is the one that comes yearly (6)
Of the 52 or 53 Fridays in a year, only the one before Easter Sunday is known as Good Friday. Cryptic definition.
24 DREARY
Gloomy and arid, capturing attention (6)
An envelope (‘capturing’) of EAR (‘attention’) in DRY (‘arid’).
DOWN
2 BRICKS-AND-MORTAR
Stand back! Mirror, perversely, is not online (6-3-6)
An anagram (‘perversely’) of ‘stand back mirror’. In the original clue, ‘Mirror’ is in itaics.
3 AWKWARD
Graceless sabre-rattler not starting to usher in war dead (7)
A charade of [h]AWK (‘sabre-rattler’) minus its first letter (‘not starting’) plus (‘to usher in’) ‘war’ plus D (‘dead’).
4 DALAI LAMA
Spiritual leader in a state, a chap’s written up (5,4)
A reversal (‘written up’ in a down light) of ‘a’ plus MALI (‘state’) plus ‘a’ plus LAD (‘chap’).
5 DITCH
Drop in moat? (5)
Double definition.
6 THE MAGI
Those people: one soldier; three kings (3,4)
A charade of THEM (‘those people’) plus A (‘one’) plus GI (‘soldier’), for the “wise men from the east’ who came bearing gifts for the infant Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew; although the Gospel indicates neither the number nor the rank of the visitors, by later tradition they are ‘three kings’.
7 GET INTO HOT WATER
Experience mishap when visiting geyser? (3,4,3,5)
Definition and literal interpretation.
9 SMOG
Foul air from small cat (4)
A charade of S (‘small’) plus MOG (or moggie, a name for a domestic ‘cat’).
10 ADEN
Major port in Pasadena (4)
A hidden answer in ‘PasADENa’.
14 UNTUTORED
Turned out, sadly, to be ignorant (9)
An anagram (‘sadly’) of ‘turned out’.
15 AIDE
Help with a passport, perhaps as embassy opens (4)
A charade of ‘a’ plus ID (Identity Document, ‘passport, perhaps’) plus E (‘Embassy opens’).
16 RELAXED
Rush around California airport that’s restful (7)
An envelope (‘around’) of LAX (the location identifier for the Los Angeles International Airport ‘California airport’) in REED (‘rush’).
18 DORMICE
Rodents cut up – headless worm inside (7)
An envelope (‘inside’) of ‘[w]orm’ minus its first letter (‘headless’) in DICE (‘cut up’).
19 SOHO
I’m surprised map- maker’s upset part of London (4)
A reversal (‘upset’ in a down light) of OH (‘I’m surprised’) plus OS (Ordnance Survey, now a government-owned company in the UK, ‘map-makers’).
21 ODDLY
In a weird way, how number’s found in the end? (5)
I suppose the wordplay refers to the enumeration ‘(5)’ at the end of the clue (or to the clue number 21, the last in the list).

 picture of the completed grid

14 comments on “Everyman 4,151”

  1. KVa

    ODDLY
    Looks like it refers to…
    ‘the end’ ODDLY is TEN

    Thanks PeterO.

  2. grantinfreo

    Ta E and PO.
    For a fun Aussie take on The Magi, google John Clarke Star of Wonder.

  3. GrahamInSydney

    I had the same parsing as KVa@2 for 21d. Bit of an ODD clue I thought. I’ll take my hat…
    Thanks to Everyman and PeterO.

  4. Roz

    Thanks for the blog , I suppose gut-rot can be caused by an OUTGROWTH of bacteria but maybe puzzles in this slot should have an actual definition . MAKE A WISH earned a severe Paddington stare . I hope that newer solvers got some enjoyment from this puzzle .

  5. Rod

    I noticed the word was mentioned to be italics. I’ve often wondered why italics are used. Could someone explain please?

  6. Rod

    I MEANT THE WORD ‘MIRROR’

  7. Robi

    Good enjoyable Everyman. I liked GRANDPA in a Greek saga, Good FRIDAY, and GET INTO HOT WATER in a geyser. Like Roz @4, I disliked the clue for MAKE A WISH, which is an indirect anagram. My Chambers crossword dictionary for ‘constant’ gives c, G, h & k, although there are others as well. Rod @5/6; Mirror is a proper noun here – the name of a UK paper.

    Thanks Everyman and PeterO.

  8. Humph

    Re Rod (5&6) I believe italics are used to suggest “enterties” to help with the surface of the clue. Here it suggests that it is perverse for the Mirror to not be online. In #4150 we had Carry On Nurse hinting at a comedy and a comedian. It is a form of misdirection.


  9. Comment #9
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  10. HumbleTim

    Couldn’t parse ODDLY, so thanks KVa@1 – it makes sense now. Otherwise I found this less of a slog than last week.I did think OUTGROWTH was a bit odd.
    Thanks Everyman and PeterO

  11. poc

    No, this bear of little brain still doesn’t get ODDLY.

    I thought OUTGROWTH lacked a definition, and still think so.

    Rod@5: it’s dangerous to assume that italics mean anything specific in cryptics. They might and they might not. Often they’re there just to make the clue read better.

  12. HumbleTim

    poc@11 – if you take the odd letters (ie oddly) of ‘the end’ you get ‘ten’, which is a number. I hope I’ve understood that right.

  13. Etu

    I’d not heard of that use of UNICORN, so thought that there were two clues lacking definitions.

    Thanks for the blog.

  14. poc

    HumbleTim@12: Ah, penny drops. Thanks.

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