Independent 7007 by Nimrod

A very good puzzle for April Fool’s Day by Nimrod.     Very tough, solving time, 66 mins.   There’s a Nina  which I refer to after the clue explanations.

* = anagram

ACROSS

6 PAUL   Robbing Peter to pay Paul, as in proverb.  Peter = safe.    I liked this.

7 GET THE CHOP    Double definition I got early on.

9 IVOR(y)

10 OR TH (OPTER) A   (hat)*    Cockroaches.   Order a very brief definition, but fair

12 SE (A) TTLE     There’s a University of Washington in Seattle, Google confirms

13 SORT OUT   Double definition with excellent surface reading

14 NO-W IN    I liked this, but trust it does not refer to Barack at this early stage of his presidency…

16 SON   Empty tin = SN (symbol for tin) with O in it.     I got this only near the end, but it seems so obvious when you see it.

18 I ON IC(e)

19 A (LSO) RAN   Aran Islands off West coast of Ireland.   London Symphony Orchestra (players)

21 I’LL WILL (leave i.e. bequeathe)

23 R(O)AD RUNNER   Hard

24 DEMO   Hidden

25 LARCENISTS   (clean stirs)*   rhyming slang  tea leaves = thieves

26 STYE   Hidden &lit

DOWN

1 C (U POLe) A   ca = about    Tough

2 DEBRI (E F) S     Definition:   After the event, reports      Very good

3 ETC HE’S

4 PEPPER MILLS (&Boon)

5 SHOEHORN    My last entry   (snore hho)*   Water = H2O

6 POISSON D’AVRIL   April fool – refers to theme   poisson = fish (swimmer) in French

8 PRACTICAL JOKE   (erotic lap Jack)*   Also thematic for the day.

11 I TIN (ER) ARIES

15 WI (SEAC) RE    (case)*

17 NOISETTE    Double definition.  Nutty/hybrid rose.   I got this only when I’d all the crossing letters

20 N (UNCI)O

22 I D(E) ATE

Nina:   As well as the thematic entries in the outermost columns.  APRIL FOOLS DAY can be seen in the diagonal from the A of PAUL to the Y of STYE.   I saw this only at the very end.

8 comments on “Independent 7007 by Nimrod”


  1. Jeez, this was tough.

    I very nearly gave up with only half the grid filled, but then spotted the diagonal Nina and that seemed to help me a lot. Still ended up 5 clues short, but that’s par for the course for me when it comes to Nimrod. Despite having done a French degree, I only knew POISSON D’AVRIL from the Azed comp a while back and needed all the checking letters before I got it. Enjoyed the PAUL clue too.

  2. Ray Folwell

    I didn’t manage to finish the NE corner, partly because I put FOR THE CHOP in.
    Failed to spot the Nina as well, I was looking for something across the top and bottom rows.


  3. Some great clues in here; the Nina certainly helped me finish. ROADRUNNER was my last entry, I spent ages trying to justify ‘rearranged’ or ‘rearranger’.

  4. Wil Ransome

    Agreed, Ali. Defeated me, not helped by my failing to see the diagonal Nina. Even now can’t see why ‘Rad’ is a political reformer in 23ac.

    One quibble: 17dn: OK a noisette is a hybrid rose, but it doesn’t mean ‘nutty’ (unless there is some sense in some dictionary of which I am unaware). I don’t like this type of clueing.

  5. Allan_C

    Wil
    Noisette: a nut-like or nut-flavoured sweet (Chambers)


  6. Re Wil’s points at 4, RAD = radical (in politics). Re ‘nutty’, I did look in a number of dicts before posting and while NOISETTE is generally a noun, it was given in a adjectival sense also in at least one.

  7. eimi

    Indeed. Collins, the most useful dictionary for Indy puzzles, gives the adjective as its first definition: flavoured or made with hazelnuts, hence, rather unspecifically but still fairly, I think, nutty.

  8. Al Streatfield

    “Collins, the most useful dictionary for Indy puzzles…

    This seems rather strange, to my way of thinking. No statistics available, of course, but at a guess, the most popular dictionary for people who do cryptic crosswords is Chambers. (I’ve never had a Collins. The popularity of this has probably increased by the Guardian giving Collins dictionary as its prize).

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