Financial Times 13,935 / Jason

Work commitments have prevented Ringo from blogging today. I hadn’t intended to solve this puzzle, and certainly hadn’t allowed any time for writing this post, so I have had to limit my input to an analysis of the clues and will leave others to comment on the puzzle itself.

Across
1 CHEMIST HEM (edge) IS in CT (court)
5 ACCEPT ACT (sketch) around CEP (mushroom)
8 SMALL BEER double def.
9 TRAMP TRAM (city vehicle) P (power)
11 DRIFT [roun]D RIFT (break)
12 PEPPERONI PEER (look) around PP (pages) ON (about) I (one)
13 SUNDRESS SUN (start of week) DRESS (clobber)
15 GRAPPA GRA[s]P (understand) PA (dad)
17 EVINCE [th]E VINCE (Cable)
19 UNCLOTHE UN (peacekeepers) CLOT (set) HE (high explosive)
22 SOFT PEDAL anagram (frightfully) of DATES FLOP
23 AMBLE M (Monsieur) in ABLE (fit)
24 RINSE RISE (get up) around N (noon)
25 INSIDE JOB INSIDE (locked up) JOB (book {of the Bible})
26 MYRTLE anagram (entwined) of TRY ELM
27 MANAGER A (answer) in MANGER (crib)
 
Down
1 CASH DISPENSER anagram (foreign) of PRINCESS HEADS
2 ELATION [r]ELATION (sister, say, runs away)
3 ISLET homophone (is said) of ‘eyelet’ (small hole for peeping)
4 TRESPASS SPAS (spring resorts) in TRES (France most)
5 ABRUPT A B (British) RU (game {Rugby Union}) PT (point)
6 CATHEDRAL anagram (extraordinary) of CARTEL HAD
7 PEA SOUP hidden in ‘hoPE AS OU Proposes’
10 PRIVATE MEMBER double def.
14 RECIPIENT anagram (is altered) of NET PRICE I
16 UNCLE SAM cryptic def. – see Wikipedia
18 INFANCY N (northern) FAN (supporter) in ICY (chilling)
20 TOBY JUG cryptic def. – a beer mug or jug typically in the form of a stout seated man wearing a three-cornered hat and smoking a pipe.
21 ADMIRE DA (attorney) reversed (rising) MIRE (a sticky situation)
23 ADD-ON A D (daughter) DON (senior collegian)

 

2 comments on “Financial Times 13,935 / Jason”

  1. Pelham Barton

    Thanks Jason for a nice gentle puzzle and Gaufrid for blogging it. Two clues I particularly enjoyed were 19ac and 1dn.

  2. DaveLaw

    Bit of poetic licence in 4dn as “most” approximates to PLUS. “very” would be more accurate for TRÈS.
    But then the clue might need to read:
    “Spring resorts enter France very illegally”

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