AZED 2,246

Quite a straightforward exercise in using Chambers (aka TBRB).  I got hung up though for ages on the SW corner since I had confidently entered GRINS instead of GIRNS for 32A.

completed grid
Across
1 ABSTRACTEDLY
Unruly brats, with lady etc in wool-gathering mode. (12)

(brats, lady etc)* — a nice easy start.

11 ORAGIOUS
Wild ducks stuffed with millet, American (8)

O(RAGI)O,US – stormy.  O=zero=duck (in cricketese) and RAGI=millet.

13 PRISSY
Spy’s oddly retaining bits of Russian intelligence, being prudish (6)

R,I in spy’s*

14 SKUNK
Strong drug, degraded – kilo ingested (5)

S(K)UNK – particularly intense version of weed. I’m told.

15 ORTHICON
Part of TV camera, this, accepted by playwright (8)

ORT(HIC)ON – ref. https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Joe_Orton and hic=(Latin) this.  A TV camera tube.

17 NICK
Scratch? Was it kitty? (4)

two meanings – where kitty is also a jail (archaic — just “was it”)

18 TONLET
Skirt of armour, considerable weight and a hindrance (6)

TON,LET – indeed a skirt of armour. Not many on offer though these days.

19 GODETIA
Plant giving energy changed a diet (7)

GO,DETIA* – yes, it’s a plant.

20 SHED
Drop fragment that’s not right in the middle (4)

SH[r]ED

22 AFRO
Anything but crew-cut for a screwball (4)

(for a)* — I wanted this to be some sort of comp. anag. by somehow removing ‘crew’ (since “cut”) from screwball.  But it’s just a hairdo v. different from a flattop.

24 ASKANCE
Question once recognized by northerners obliquely (7)

ASK,ANCE – where ance=Scots “once”.

26 BREWIS
Concoction consists of broth, especially beef (6)

BREW=concoction, IS=consists of.

29 VOAR
Time for sowing first of veg, leading row (4)

V[eg],OAR=row – seed time in the Shetlands.

30 AMORETTI
Lovers at it frantically, rather absorbed (8)

A(MORE)TTI – more=rather in (at it)*.  turns out there are at least two other 8-letter Italian lovers (other than Casanova) — amorosos and amorists.

32 GIRNS
Strong drinks with a dash of Ribena in? Makes a face (5)

GI(R)NS – hands up if you had G(R)INS here initally — which is just as plausible.  Anyway, GIRNS=grins, makes a grotesque face.

33 GANOIN
It coats fish scales, convenient for some netting number (6)

Enamel-like scales.  GA(NO)IN – where no=abbrev(number) and GAIN=convenient.

34 STENOTIC
Constipated? This pad treats that (8)

cong. anag. &lit – (constipated)* = (STENOTIC=this, pad) — I’m going to go out on a limb and claim that somewhere there’s a STENOTIC pad that treats stenosis=constipation.

35 BETACAROTENE
Nutrient, eaten to brace when cooked (12)

(eaten to brace)*

Down
2 BAR,RIO
Hispanic quarter to prohibit revelry mostly (6)

BAR,RIO[t]

3 SLIT
Cut bit of salsify and sesame up (4)

S,LIT – rev(til=sesame)

4 TUSHKER
Aid for bog diggers maybe, hard with boar around (7)

TUS(H)KER – a peat-spade in the Shetlands.

5 ROSIT
Scottish fiddler’s standby cheers when piano’s removed (6)

[p]ROSIT – Scots rosin – useful for a violin player and prosit is European “cheers!”

6 CAPOTASTO
Bridge starters for courses after spud with special stuffing (9)

C,A,POTA(S)TO – a (moveable) bridge on a string instrument.  S=special and C,A=first letters of “courses after”.

7 EIKON
Image, eastern one with king on (5)

E,I,K,ON – alt. spelling of icon.

8 DOUBLE
Not something you want to do when serving a big drink? (6)

two meanings – ref. DOUBLE fault in tennis.

9 LUNGED
Following round, gun going off thrust forward (6)

gun* in led=”following round”.

10 SPONGEBAGS
What excessive freeloaders do? They usually accompany travellers (10)

I guess the wordplay is SPONGE,BAGS = a sponger might try to obtain “bags” of free stuff.

12 SKITTERING
Model welcoming king in German? Such activity is superficial (10)

S(K)ITTER,IN,G

16 CHIASMATA
Intersections, as in a match I struck (9)

CHI(AS)MATA – “as” in (a match I)* – intersections (in anatomy)

21 HAVENOT
Pauper in shelter given therapy of a kind (7)

HAVEN,OT – where OT isn’t the Old Testament but Occupational Therapy.

22 ARKITE
Take on board a plane a flood survivor (6)

Tough clue — A(R)KITE – where R=take (recipe), KITE is our plane and finally if you managed to survive the flood on Noah’s ark, you’re entitled to be known as an ARKITE.

23 FERRET
Rummage for thin ribbon, measures wrapping roller (6)

FE(RR)ET – where RR=Rolls-Royce, our “roller” and also two meanings: both “rummage” and “thin ribbon”.

25 CATION
Alter this and dispute results – it’s positively charged (6)

Dispute “results” from “Alter”CATION(“this”) and a positively charged ion.  Struggled to figure this out for a while having understood the definition.

27 WINNA
Won’t Scots get a result, one up? (5)

WIN=result, NA=rev(an=one). Scots “will not”.

28 DRACO
Lizard: breed shedding tail in effect? (5)

D(RAC[e])O – dragon lizard.

31 TOPE
Lush plantation (4)

two meanings – first is related to drinking and the second is an Indian plantation.

*anagram

11 comments on “AZED 2,246”

  1. Not sure about the CATION clue. Seems like an indirect anagram. I, too, got GIRNS wrong (the wordplay surely fits either), and then failed to get ARKITE and FERRET.

  2. I was also puzzled by the clue for CATION, thinking it was an indirect anagram of ACTION. It’s not, of course, because the clue cleverly exploits the apparent meaning of ALTER, blinding you to the fact that it’s just there as part of ALTERCATION (dispute).

    Interestingly, two of the across answers, ORAGIOUS and AMORETTI, are highlighted in the 12th edition of Chambers (2011) and were therefore omitted (in error) from the current edition. Fortunately, for me anyway, they are included in the app.

  3. 20ac

    Having an archaeological friend who often pick up pottery sherds in my presence, I assumed 20ac was SHE[r]D – but note that Chambers includes ‘fragment’ in his entry for SHRED, but not in the entry for SHARD/SHERD.

    (My friend always uses the spelling SHERD in publications).

  4. Re 1 ac
    I thought etc is used for things, not people.
    Could someone enlighten me? Or am I already enlightened?

  5. Nick
    Thanks.
    I am just wondering if I must start unlearning things.
    I don’t know Latin but my father’s library had books on English usage (who talks of Fowler’s MEU nowadays?) and I as a boy used to dip into them.
    See http://www.grammarly.com/blog/2014/latin-lesson-etc-vs-et-al/
    Perhaps because people use these abbreviations rather loosely in everyday conversation, the distinction has blurred.
    That is why I was cautious in my query.

  6. I’m in the (? majority) group who confidently put in Grins, and then struggled on the last two downs.
    Rishi, you are indeed enlightened.

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