Apologies for the slightly delayed appearance of this blog – I had made a start on it last Sunday and then completely forgot about it. Fairly average on the Azed difficulty scale, I think – certainly a lot easier than the ferocious “Give and Take” puzzle from the week before. Thanks to Azed.
| Across | ||||||||
| 1. | CLADE | Those with a common ancestor, see, put on board (5) C (see) + LADE |
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| 8. | PRIMO | Initially rather proper, before love (5) PRIM + O |
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| 12. | HOMEOTELEUTON | It doesn’t necessarily mean rhyming in deployment of note/lote round hokku’s end (13) HOME (in) + [hokk]U in (NOTE LOTE)* – it’s “the use or occurrence of similar word endings” |
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| 13. | CONGO | Tea supplying energy after study (5) CON (study) + GO |
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| 14. | MIRBANE | Drunken bar where diamonds are found? Jewellers made it up (7) BAR* in MINE (diamonds are found in a mine). Chambers says it’s “an apparently meaningless word… a name for nitrobenzene, as used in perfumery” – so should the jewellers in the clue have been perfumiers? |
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| 15. | CHRISTOM | Baptismal robe, most rich in embroidery (8) (MOST RICH)* |
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| 17. | KATAL | SI unit end of a lecture brought to the fore (5) A TALK with K moved to the front |
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| 18. | TRUNNION | It enables a gun to pivot in turn when moved about (8) (IN TURN)* + ON (about) |
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| 23. | BISTABLE | Descriptive of a valve sat uncomfortably in stomach (8) SAT* in BIBLE (one of the stomachs of a ruminant) |
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| 25. | MOUTH | Master at a loss with hard insolence (5) M + OUT + H |
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| 27. | PIANISTE | I may play composition of Satie, with 50% Chopin (8) Anagram of SATIE + [cho]PIN, and “semi-&lit” as both composers wrote mostly for the piano |
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| 28. | DAHLIAS | Flowers ships conveyed westwards (7) Reverse of SAIL HAD |
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| 29. | RADII | Bones? Studied old couple from Roman times (5) RAD (old form of “read”) + II (Roman 2) |
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| 30. | DEFERVERSCENCY | It disperses fevers, in fairness (13) FEVERS* in DECENCY |
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| 31. | YARDS | Touches of yellow and red distinguishing some gardens (5) First letters of Yellow And Red Distinguishing Some |
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| 32. | ALGAE | Found in tea glass, we should be sent back! (5) Hidden in reverse of tEA GLAss, &lit |
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| Down | ||||||||
| 1. | CHICK-A-BIDDY | An old woman with sun screen above her little darling (11) CHICK (Anglo-Indian sun screen) + A BIDDY (old woman) |
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| 2. | LOCHAN | Sub with chart entered wee stretch of water (6) CH[art] in LOAN (sub) |
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| 3. | AMORTISE | Special deal for atomiser? Write off (8) ATOMISER* |
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| 4. | DENIAL | Wrinkly holds one up saying no (6) A in reverse of LINED |
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| 5. | STOTTY | Loaf little one’s consumed in pen (6) TOT in STY |
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| 6. | DEMORALISED | Gunners, model side on the outside, clobbered, losing heart (11) RA in (MODEL SIDE)* |
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| 7. | GLIM | Grand border but it’s lacking light (4) G + LIM[it] |
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| 8. | PERONE | A single leg bone (6) PER (a) + ONE – another name for the tibia |
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| 9. | RUBIN | Emphasize unpleasantly it’s an old stone (5) RUB IN (as in “don’t rub it in!”) |
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| 10. | MONA | Mother keeping close to monkey (4) ON (close to) in MA |
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| 11. | ONE IN THE EYE | Rebuff received by Harold? (11, 4 words) Double definition – referring to King Harold supposedly being killed by an arrow through the eye at the Battle of Hastings |
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| 16. | MISUSING | Contemplation about lives showing ill-treatment (8) IS in MUSING |
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| 19. | JAGIRS | James, about to dress up, calling for income from land-holders (6) Reverse of RIG in JAS |
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| 20. | HEARSE | Male’s internal organs in meat wagon (6) EARS in HE – “Male’s” needs to be read has “Male has” |
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| 21. | GOIDEL | Gaelic speaker set about translation of Ido (6) IDO* in GEL |
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| 22. | ATTICA | Home of salt, famously – I act differently after even pinches of it (6) [s]A[l]T + (I ACT)* – the region around Athens, giving its name to “Attic salt” = dry wit |
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| 24. | TILED | Cold viands, say, half of it served up with a certain topping(5) Reverse of DELI + [i]T |
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| 26. | GAEA | Earth: parts of grave regularly covering one (4) Alternate letters of GrAvE + A |
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| 27. | PAVE | Sidewalk lip a vehicle conceals (4) Hidden in liP A VEhicle |
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Thanks Azed and Andrew
In the parsing of 12ac, I am sure you meant to write HOME (in), not IN (home).
Well spotted, Pelham. Now corrected.
Yes, steady solve here with all clues (eventually) understood. I usually have one or two where I need this blog to explain them
Not as mind bending as the previous week’s, but not as straightforward as the ones that preceded it either, so probably about average difficulty. At this point in time, I can remember little else about it. 🙂
Andrew, you’re right about MIRBANE. Today’s Observer, in the corrections column on page 36 of the main paper, actually says this: “Azed 2,286 (New Review, last week, page 41) might have been confused with this clue: Drunken bar where diamonds are found? Jewellers made it up (7). The answer was MIRBANE. However, nitrobenzene, or oil of mirbane, is used in the making of soaps and perfumes, not jewellery.”
I can’t remember such a correction appearing previously.
I have been show a recipe for making up jeweller’s rouge in which mirbane was an ingredient.