Financial Times no.14,392 by Orense

A welcome return for our friend Orense, who always does a sound job on a Thursday.

Having said that, however, the structure of this morning’s puzzle (with its 4 x 15-letter word perimeter), as well as burdening Orense with a lot of words ending in ‘i’, made this perhaps a little on the easy side. Not always a bad thing, though – thank-you, Orense.

ACROSS

1. POINT OF NO RETURN  Cryptic definition

9. INCOMER  Income [salary] + r [right]

10. ENTREAT  Entr(y) [access] + breakfast [eat]

11. TESTS  Jests [jokes] with t [time] replacing j [judge]

12. MAHARISHI  Ma [mother] + anagram of his hair

13. HARMONICA  Harm [damage] + anagram of a coin

15. MULCH  L(inen) within much [a lot of]

16. TASTE  Double definition

18. INSIDE OUT  In [at home] + side [spin] + out [banned]

20. WATCHCASE  Watch [see] + case [patient]

23. CAIRN  I [one] in car [vehicle] + N [north, bearing]

24. ROSSINI  (C)ross [angry] + in [home] + I [international]

25. BENGALI  Ben [mountain] + gal [girl] + I [one]

26. DRY STONE WALLING  Anagram of lets down any girl

DOWN

1. PAINT THE TOWN RED  Cryptic definition, playing on the colour of Manchester United’s shirts

2. INCISOR  In [popular] + CI [Channel Islands, island group] + odd letters of ScOuRs

3. TOMBSTONE  To + MB’s [doctor’s] + tone [quality]

4. FORUM  F [female] + O [zero, nothing] + rum [odd]

5. OVERHEADS  Over [completed] + heads [bosses]

6. ESTER  Hidden in interEST ERror

7. UTENSIL  Anagram of let us in

8. NOTWITHSTANDING  Not with standing [having no status]

14. IMITATION  (L)imitation [restriction]

15. MEDICINAL  Medici [Italian family] + initial letters of Nuts And Leaves

17. SATISFY  Sat [Saturday, day] + I [one] + final letters of loadS oF moneY

19. ORIGAMI  Rig [equipment] within O [old] + ami [French for ‘friend]

21. HOIST  I [one] within host [crowd]

22. ELBOW  L [left] within E [English] + bow(l) [dish]

4 comments on “Financial Times no.14,392 by Orense”

  1. Pelham Barton

    Thanks Orense for a pleasantly straightforward puzzle and Ringo for the blog.

    Two quite nice cryptic definition clues here at 1ac/1dn – in each case more help than a straight definition would give and additional help from the enumeration means that they are a lot more than one-part clues.

    I would put 16ac somewhere in the middle of the range for double definitions – as I have said before, I feel the best of these are generally when words from two different derivations have converged in spelling. Here we have two somewhat different meanings derived from the same root.

    A particularly well-connected grid with over 50% cross-checking in all answers and Orense has done very well to fill it in without any answers that I would regard as really obscure.

  2. Keeper

    Thanks for the blog, Ringo. Agree this was on the easy side (particularly when compared to Redshank’s FT offering earlier this week). As a Yank, I’ve been forced to pick up cricket terminology to work British crosswords. But spin = side (18a) is a new one. Would someone be kind enough to explain that term? Thanks!

  3. Pelham Barton

    Hi Keeper. As I understand it, “side” for “spin” is not cricket but snooker. If the cue ball is hit to one side of the centre, it will have spin on it and therefore come at a different angle off cushions and possibly when striking other balls.

  4. Keeper

    Ah, thanks PB. Looks like there’s another UK-centric sport I need to get familiar with…

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