Beelzebub 1,259

This seemed to be a solve of two halves for me. Progress was quite smooth until the last half dozen or so entries, whereby I had to hit the Chambers search pretty hard to get finished. Still, a few new words were learned in the process, which is no bad thing.

30 across still has me beaten: I’m unable to identify either the pass or the fern.

*=anagram, []=dropped, <=reversed.

Across
1 ORTHOEPICAL – (HOE + PIC) in [p]ORTAL.
10 EUTYCHIAN – (CHA[s]E UNITY)*.
11 SALUTARY – UT in SALARY.
12 USED – US + ED.
13 DESPOTESP in DOT. I don’t think I’ve come across “dot” meaning “to limp” before, and wonder if it’s perhaps a horse racing term.
15 APEX – APE + X.
16 ADEEM – [tr]ADE EM[bargo].
17 CONSIDERABLE – (ON + SIDE + R) in CABLE.
20 LITTLE DORRIT – LIT + (ORDER* in TILT<). A novel by Charles Dickens, I hardly need add.
22 ENIACA in (EN + IC.
25 ETCH – [f]ETCH.
27 STELAE – ([garbag]E + L) in EATS<.
28 ASTI – ASTI[r].
29 MESMERIC – MES[h] + MERI + C. A “meri” or “mere” is a Maori war-club.
30 CHINAROOTPass round fern lacking density in rhizome.
31 PLAIN-SPOKEN – (I + N + SPOKE) in PLAN.
Down
1 OBSTACLE RACE – (COLT BEARS)* + ACE.
2 REAPPOINT – REAP + (IN in POT).
3 TILDEL in TIDE.
4 OUTSAIL – (U + [limi]T) in (OS + AIL).
5 ETAPEe + TAPE.
6 PYROPEP + Y + ROPE. I got this one wrong, writing in PYROSE on the fairly reasonable assumption that there might be a painter named Rose. Even if there is, it’s ROPE, of which “painter” is a type.
7 CHUDDAR – (HUD + D) in CAR.
8 AISLE – IS in ALE.
9 INDOMETHACIN – (MEDIC HIT ON AN)*.
14 HELICTITE – (T in ELICIT) in HE.
18 STAMINAST + ANIMA<.
19 ROLLMOP – (L + L + M) in POOR<.
21 EXTERN – EX + TERN*.
23 INTIL – ([connectio]N in IT) + I + L. It took a while to spot the definition here: it’s simply “Scots to”.
24 PESOS – PE + SOS.
26 TEREK – [la]KE RET[urned]<.

 

5 comments on “Beelzebub 1,259”

  1. Dormouse

    30ac, the pass is a CHIT and the fern is the NARDOO.


  2. Fair enough, thanks! I’m not sure I’d ever have got there myself, though CHIT seems vaguely familiar.

  3. Dormouse

    I think I recall Chit from Dan Dare back in the sixties, which suggest to me it might have been an army term in the old National Service days and I see it’s an Anglo-Indian term. (A character said, “Have you signed your chits” which led Dare to guess that the person was ex-Space Fleet.)


  4. That’s some memory you have there. I don’t feel so bad, given that I wasn’t born then!

  5. Dormouse

    🙂

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