AZED 2,194

A routine plain Azed this week, made a little harder if you were using the online version.

There were a couple of instances where the letter count failed to show that more than one word was involved, a bizarre misprint in one clue, and another clue omitted entirely. The moral is always to use the pdf if you don’t have access to the version printed in the newspaper.

Across
1 COBBY Local’s lively, and evasive about books
BB in COY.
5 MAMMOCK Mother has to ridicule old-fashioned mangle
MAM, MOCK.  I originally entered the alternative spelling MUMMOCK, but that didn’t work with 6 down.
10 OLEAGINOUS Like a toady, using love deviously behind e.g. privets
OLEA, *(O USING).
12 CLEGS Clubs introducing entertainment, not how they’ll sting you
C LEGS(how).
13 DRAIN What’ll fill it after start of downpour?
D RAIN.
14 PROCINCT Nothing replaces energy in US copshop, being prepared as of old
O for E in PRECINCT.
15 SEELY Good old foxy gobbling bits of eviscerated eirack
E E in SLY.  As “foxy” is only given in Chambers as an adjective, I thought that the surface reading made little sense.
16 HAKAM A king embraced by patriarch’s son, a Hebrew sage
A K in HAM (one of Noah’s sons).
18 HARD AT IT Art I’d worked on in e.g. Leghorn, very busy
*(ART ID) in HAT.  It’s a kind of straw hat.  The online version of this clue lacked the information that the answer has three words, as mentioned by Sidey last week.
22 COLLEGER Pass Latin, English and German as assisted pupil at Eton
COL L E GER.
24 TRUSS Selection of citrus slices to skewer for cooking, say
Hidden in “citrus slices”.
25 KVASS What’ll get Slovaks drunk – this, with none left?
Compound anagram: take O and L from Slovaks and rearrange what’s left.  As usual, it’s also an & lit.
28 STICKIES Adhesive labels to mark off, i.e. when put in steamer
TICK IE in SS.
29 LARUS Seabirds gone astray in Urals
*URALS.
30 RIGEL Shackle that’s released on backing for big star
LEG-IR(on) (rev).
31 TRIATHLETE Versatile competitor, worn-out, ‘ealth broken internally
*EALTH in TRITE.
32 MICELLE Group of chains one found in front of dungeon in Middle East
1 CELL in ME.
33 KASHA Porridge as served in nameless eastern inn
AS in KHA(n).  This meaning of “khan” is one which Azed has used before.
Down
1 COCKSHOT Aunt Sally with a high temperature after piles
COCKS HOT.  A smooth surface reading.
2 OLLIE Winter sport manoeuvre? Flipped badly in what involved gambling
ILL in E O (all rev).  E O is a mid-18th century gambling game; I speculate that the letters stood for even and odd.
3 BEEZER Piece of cake, second to last? A cracker for Jock
BREEZE with the second letter moved to the end.
4 BAGEL Roll keeping a long time in barrel
AGE in BL.
5 MICROTOMICAL What’s funny about joke after I’m upended preparing for a slide?
IM(rev), ROT in COMICAL.
6 ANDOUILLETTE Sausage, ‘netted’, all in bits? Certainly French will tuck into that
OUI in *(NETTED ALL).  It’s a semi-& lit clue, in that andouillettes are a particularly French speciality sausage, even if they aren’t ususally sold in nets.
7 MURIATE Without speaking about it, look up ‘archaic chlorine compound’
AIR (rev) in MUTE.  The online version omitted the final inverted comma.
8 CHICANE Church accepts this Roman article as a bit of trickery
HIC AN in CE.
9 KANT Turn on edge one knight captured by another
A N in KT.  N stands for “knight” in chess notation.
11 SANKO Guitar went low – nothing lower
SANK 0.  Bizarrely, 2013 was inserted in the middle of the text in the online version of the clue.
17 MARSILEA Water ferns, strain that SA rodent devours
SILE in MARA.
19 AIR TAXI Nine main apartments put up offering chopper for hire?
IX ATRIA (all rev).  The fact that a chopper (ax) appears in the answer seems to be a coincidence.
20 DISCURE Cruised at sea to learn old-style?
*CRUISED.
21 QUIRT Whip Bunter’s rear, cutting leave
R in QUIT.
23 GANGES River crews rounding end of course
E in GANGS.
26 VOILA Palm-fringed island, look
I in VOLA.
27 SIETA In time it’s the end of the noose for this old bushwhacker?
E in SITH.
28 SLIM Rarely crafty general reduced line in feigned situation
L in SIM.  Unusually, Azed has provided two definitions, one referring to the famous World War II general.  This clue was entirely missing from the online version.

*anagram

1 comment on “AZED 2,194”

  1. Thanks to Bridgesong for the blog and Azed for the puzzle.

    10 across, OLEAGINOUS OLEA, *(O USING).

    Here, OLEA is clued by ‘e.g. privets’, but this is technically wrong.
    The OLEACEAE contain Ligustrum (Privets), Olea (The Olive) and Fraxinus (Ash)
    but OLEA itself does not contain privets.

    The entry in [my old] Chambers creates confusion by mixing comments on OLEA and OLEACEAE in a single sentence.
    So I blame Chambers, not AZED.

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