Financial Times 15,235 – Dante

Monday Prize Crossword / May 9, 2016

It’s Dante. So, mostly easy-ish. And also ‘that last one in’….  Today it was 15ac.


Definitions are underlined wherever possible and/or appropriate.

Across
1 ALCOTT Rural cottage providing home for a writer (6)
Hidden solution, indicated by ‘home for’:   [rur]AL COTT[age]
Louisa May Alcott (1832-1888), American novelist.
Want to know more about her?  Look here .
4 PROCEEDS Advances total sums (8)
Double definition
9 RARITY Uncommon thing you won’t come across very often (6)
(Not so very) Cryptic definition
10 STAMPEDE Running out of stock, all at once (8)
Cryptic definition
12 PROLIFIC Being fertile for most of one’s life – I will be near 100 (8)
PRO (for) + LIF[e] + I + C (100)
‘Most of one’s life’ = LIF?
13 VOODOO Sorcery makes five ducks go to five hundred ducks (6)
V (five) + O,O (ducks, zero plus zero) + D (five hundred) + O,O (ducks, again)
15 SEAL Bull or cow to make an impression (4)
Double definition
My last one in.
A male seal (the marine animal) is called a bull but I cannot justify ‘cow’, I’m afraid.
Probably a female seal.
16 DEAD SECRET Wrongly desecrated something very private (4,6)
(DESECRATED)*    [* = wrongly]
19 DETERMINES Deem rent is not right, but settles (10)
(DEEM RENT IS)*    [* = not right]
20 ESAU Use a different name for Jacob’s twin brother (4)
(USE A)*    [* = different]
23 POPLAR Timber producer of high standing, well-liked until found to be heartless (6)
POP[u]LAR (well-liked, with the central letter missing)
25 MANDARIN Chinese official in loose jacket (8)
Double definition
A mandarin can be a citrus fruit with a loose yellow-orange skin.
That may explain the second part of the clue.
As Hamish says below, a mandarin jacket is a collarless jacket. That was possibly what Dante had in mind.
I did consider that but wasn’t very keen on it for the reason mentioned in my comment @5.
27 REQUIRED Ordered 24 sheets in colour (8)
QUIRE (24 sheets) inside RED (colour)
28 DENIER He refuses a measure of silk (6)
Double definition
29 SWEPT OUT Did a menial job but made a grand exit (5,3)
Double definition
30 NETTLE It grows painful to touch (6)
Cryptic definition
Down
1 APROPOS A Rugby player, too fat to be fit (7)
A + PROP (Rugby player) + OS (too fat, over sized)
2 CORMORANT Bird, bulb or insect (9)
CORM (bulb) + OR + ANT (insect)
3 TITBIT Two birds, not the tern, make a tasty morsel (6)
TIT (a bird) + {BITTERN (another bird) minus TERN}
No particular reason to use the word ‘the’.
5 RATS Sun rising? Nonsense! (4)
Reversal, indicated by ‘rising’, of STAR (Sun, for example)
6 COMPOSED Made up a number (8)
(Not so very) Cryptic / Double definition
7 EMEND Putting me in goal is right (5)
ME inside END (goal)
8 STEP OUT Leave the ranks and increase the pace (4,3)
Double definition
11 LIBERIA Country ruler caught in false alibi (7)
ER (ruler) inside (ALIBI)*    [* = false]
14 ADRENAL Notice and learn about one sort of gland (7)
AD (notice) + (LEARN)*    [* = about]
17 RESTRAINT Teach the others about self-control (9)
TRAIN (teach) with REST (the others) around it
18 ORGANIST Player given an awful roasting (8)
(ROASTING)*    [* = awful]
19 DEPARTS Sets out from French territory (7)
DE (from, in French) + PARTS (territory)
I would be happy if someone could tell me why ‘territory’ is a good description of ‘parts’.
21 UNNERVE Make someone unsettled – even run away (7)
(EVEN RUN)*    [* = away]
22 ADHERE Stick unusually hard with twice initial efficiency (6)
(HARD + E[fficiency] + E[fficiency])*    [* = unusually]
24 PIQUE Resentment shown when card game is unfinished (5)
PIQUET (card game) minus its last letter T
26 BEAU Live with a university boyfriend (4)
BE (live) + A + U (university)

*anagram

7 comments on “Financial Times 15,235 – Dante”

  1. Hi Sil
    The online Oxford has:
    Parts – (informal) a region, especially one not clearly specified or delimited.

    I had the initial reservations as you did.

  2. Yes, in Scotland we refer to ‘airts and pairts’, broadly meaning other territories. But I thought some of the clueing was really tepid even by Dante’s standards. Eg. 9ac, 15ac, 20ac, 25ac, 30ac. Still fun to do, though, as ever.

  3. Thanks Sil and Dante.

    As far as I am aware, a female seal is known as a cow, and a young seal is a calf.

    A mandarin jacket is collarless.

    I seem to recall that the French often shorten their word Departments (e.g. Pas de Calais) to “Departs”.

    Agree with you that “the” in 3 is superfluous as is the “one’s” in 12. I just put this down to the usual Dante smooth surface at the expense of precise clueing.

    Whilst not usually a fan of Dante’s cryptic clues, I thought that 10 was excellent.

  4. Thanks Dante and Sil

    Found this at the medium – harder end of Dante’s range with the SW corner holding out stubbornly at the end. Eventually finished with SWEPT OUT, POPLAR and the tricky DEPARTS.

    Some classic Dante economically clued words such as CORMORANT and the well hidden ALCOTT, but there were some of Hornbeam’s aptly called tepid ones.

  5. Hamish, ‘mandarin’ meaning ‘a collarless jacket’ was my first association, too.
    However, I was not sure whether the jacket itself should be called ‘mandarin’.
    I decided to reject this option because of Dante then using the wrong part of speech.
    Which, probably, is actually what he meant?

  6. I left 15a blank even with s?a?.

    No problem with 19d “I’m off to foreign parts next week”.

    I took 25a to be the item of clothing.

  7. Thanks Dante and Sil.

    I was happy with “parts” (“parts unknown”, “round these parts” and so on — maybe it’s a regional thing? No pun intended).

    For 5d I had assumed RATS from the wordplay but I don’t see how it means “nonsense”.

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