Azed 2154

Definitely one from the hard end of the Azed scale. Starting this last Sunday morning, I failed to solve more than a smattering of clues, so I put it aside and didn’t get back to it till Saturday. I hoped that the muses would be kinder to me then, but it was hard work to finish it off. I think this was a least partly due to an unusually high proportion of unfamiliar words (or, as in 24a for example, a familiar word given an obscure definition).

 
 
 
Across
1. Dandy returned cereal in antique cupboard (8)
BEAUFFET BEAU (dandy) + reverse of TEFF(an Ethiopean cereal grass)
7. Scottish bear top BBC official released from net (4)
DREE DREDGE less D[irector] G[eneral]. “Bear” as a verb in the sense “tolerate”
10. It’s hard in varied tree range (10)
GREENHEART H in (TREE RANGE)* &lit
11. Thicket has stunted old hedge (4)
SHAW S (“has”, stunted) + HAW (old word for hedge)
12. Fortress devastation mostly overturned, dammit (6)
CASBAH Reverse of SAC[k] + BAH!
14. Fish to eat? He fumbled with it imbibing spirituous liquor (8)
TERAKIHI RAKI in (HE IT)*. A bit of a dictionary chase here: Terakihi in Chambers refers to the spelling “tarakihi”, defined as “a morwong”, which is “an Australian food fish”
16. Fashion, integral part of futurism, I think (5)
SMITH Hidden in futuriSM I THink. Finally an easy clue!
18. A plate of insects from Roman province, second held back till last (4)
GULA GAUL, with the A moved to the end. The “plate of insects” is a protective structure on an insects back, nothing to do with I’m a celebrity, ger me out of here.
19. Fishing vessel – or what she resembles closely? (9)
HERRINGER What she resembles closely is “HER RINGER”
20. Arab with power vested in observance – one on the make (9)
ARRIVISTE AR + VIS in RITE
22. Backward lout retaining name as astringent (4)
KINO N in reverse of OIK
24. Coarse linen that goes into the making of Lycra shirts (5)
CRASH HIdden in LyCRA SHirts – easy wordplay but using an obscure definition
26. Cut back on fish, limiting recipe (8)
RETRENCH R in RE (on) TENCH
29. Messenger more open to view clutching latest from battle (6)
BEARER [battl]E in BARER
30. Pen brief CV including last item in career (4)
BIRO [caree]R in BIO[graphy]
31. Not disputing a tennis set, injured (10)
ASSENTIENT (A TENNIS SET)*
32. Sandal wood (old-style) gate (4)
GETA GATE*. “Wood2” is Scots or Shakespearian (hence “old-style”) “mad, fierce, furious”
33. Fairy’s kept in by swirling snow, not wanting drill? (8)
SELF-SOWN ELF’S in SNOW*
 
Down
1. Punch ruined carousal (4)
BUST Triple definition
2. To propound theories about myth, he and I use mere waffle (10)
EUHEMERISE (HE I USE MERE)*
3. Fungus – farming in short must contain one (6)
AGARIC I in AGRIC[ulture]
4. Old Scottish tenor did this with last bit of folk (4)
FECK FEC – abbreviation of Latin “fecit” = [he] did (or made) [this] – + [fol]K . Interestingly and rather surprisingly, Chambers doesn’t give the “Father Ted” sense of this word.
5. Literary society paid money to hold ancient books, German (9)
FELIBRIGE LIBRI (Latin for “books”) + G in FEE (money paid)
6. Opposite of us up north, with the intention to be rid of English (5)
THAIM THE AIM less E – Scots form of “them”
7. Draughtsman lumping it when extreme characters are switched (8)
DESIGNER RESIGNED (“lumping it”) with its outer letters exchanged
8. In gathering of spring grain, crop first half of cabbage (4)
RABI [KOHL]RABI
9. Popular controller managing the ranch (8)
ETHNARCH (THE RANCH)* – “popular” as in “of the people” rather than “liked”
13. It has its own key, being within all eight? (10, 2 words)
ALLEN SCREW ENS (being) in ALL CREW (eight, as in rowing)
15. I’ll provide stuff for those bowing – and scraping? (9)
HORSETAIL I think this refers to the fact that horse [tail] hair is used to make both barristers’ wigs (“those bowing”) and violin bows (“scraping”)
16. Fighting cock, beak ripping into old quail (8)
SHAKE-BAG BEAK in SHAG (shag and quail are both obsolete words for, as Chambers puts it, a whore)
17. Thyroid inhibitor hit a roué being treated (8)
THIOUREA (HIT A ROUE)*
21. Revered figure I cloaked in loose old gown (6)
MANITO I in MANTO – form of “manteau”, a 17-18c woman’s loose gown, cf. “mantle”
23. Serving girls having to get right inside nasty spots (5)
WRENS R in WENS. The Wrens were the female branch of the Royal Navy (my late mother was briefly a member during WW2, though she always claimed they spent most of their time doing amateur dramatics), incorporated into the RN in 1993
25. What’ll make one change veal to duck? It’s considerable (4)
VAST V AS T would change VEAL to TEAL
27. Bank charging nothing? Head should be forced to last! (4)
REEF FREE with the first letter moved to the end
28. Aussie sledger (maybe) against pursuing moderation (4)
HOON HO (moderation – apparently from “ho!” meaning “stop!”) + ON (against). Hoon is an Australian/NZ word for a lout or yob, and to sledge is a cricketing term meaning to upset a batsman’s concentration by insulting him, as such a person might do.

1 comment on “Azed 2154”


  1. 15. HORSETAIL. I interpreted “those bowing” as the violinists, and the scraping to refer to the plant horsetail, also known as scouring-rush, formerly used for scouring pos and pans.

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