Guide to the solution of the free demonstration crossword (cryptic, not concise!) found at

Similar documents
Cryptic Crosswords for Bright Sparks

*High Frequency Words also found in Texas Treasures Updated 8/19/11

X Marks the Spot. For the Teacher. Creature Features. BEFORE READING Set the Stage. AFTER READING Talk About It. READING STRATEGY Making Inferences

...so you don't just sit! POB Ames, IA / / fax 4

Reading Skills. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

A Sherlock Holmes story A Scandal in Bohemia by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Chapter 4

Ten-Minute Grammar VERBALS. LITERATURE: This unit contains example selections from the novel Fallen Angels by Walter Dean Meyers.

I) Documenting Rhythm The Time Signature

Handouts. Teaching Elements of Personal Narrative Texts Gateway Resource TPNT Texas Education Agency/The University of Texas System

A few weeks ago we read an extract from The Lovely Bones the opening of the novel which is narrated by Susie. What can you remember?

GAGOSIAN. Ann Binlot So you started this series three years ago? Dan Colen I started the series four or five years ago.

56 Discoveries in Egypt Howard Carter discovers Tutankhamen

Sample. A Recipe for Disaster. Introduction: Detective s Log. A Recipe for Disaster. Did you know... FALSE ALARM: Introduction Detective Series

This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold.

CHRISTMAS COMES to DETROIT LOUIE

ABSS HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS LIST C List A K, Lists A & B 1 st Grade, Lists A, B, & C 2 nd Grade Fundations Correlated

Written by Judy Blume Illustrated by Sonia O. Lisker Packet by Kiley and Anisa Kyrene de las Brisas Elementary School April 2001

Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS

Chapter 1. Rafe Is a Big, Fat Liar

Who will make the Princess laugh?

Anansi Tries to Steal All the Wisdom in the World

Extras. Use the newspaper for reading activities. Reading. Joe Walker Elementary School Mr. Tommy J. Bedillion, Principal

Rubric: Cambridge English, Preliminary English Test for Schools - Listening.

Spelling Tip. out. round

The Ten Minute Tutor Read-a-long Book Video Chapter 20 TREASURE ISLAND. Author - Robert Louis Stevenson

INTRODUCTION. English Is Stupid

Betrayal. Pinter Resource Pack.

Language at work Present simple

ADAM By Krista Boehnert

Happy/Sad. Alex Church

A Sherlock Holmes story The Norwood Builder by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Chapter 1

ORCHARD BOOKS 338 Euston Road, London NW1 3BH Orchard Books Australia Level 17/207 Kent Street, Sydney, NSW 2000

Forty-Four Editing Reminders

Surviving Oxygen Therapy by Courey

THE BULLY. Book by David L. Williams. Perusal Copy. Music and Lyrics by John Gregor

Downloaded from

Read in the most efficient way possible. You ll want to use a slightly different approach to prose than you would to poetry, but there are some

Unit 2 The Parrot. 2A Introduction. 2B Song Lyrics. attractive / captivity / carefree / coax / desire / frantic / plead / release / tragic / vast

ДЕМОВЕРСИЯ РАБОТЫ ПО АНГЛИЙСКОМУ ЯЗЫКУ ДЛЯ ПОСТУПЛЕНИЯ В 8 КЛАСС. VOCABULARY

Mixers. The functions of a mixer are simple: 1) Process input signals with amplification and EQ, and 2) Combine those signals in a variety of ways.

BBC Learning English Talk about English The Reading Group Part 7

LESSON 21 Expressing Empathy and Understanding for Others

c l a s s r o o m a n d at t h e m a n y s k i l l s

Student Activities. The Body in the Library. Part 1 (Chapters 1 4)

access / companion / crave / document / escalate / hazy / mischief / oasis / suspend / visual

Language Paper 1 Knowledge Organiser

Ideas. 5 Perfecting That s it! Focused, clear, specific, concise. 3 Enhancing On my way Ready for serious revision. 1 Developing Just beginning

STANZAS FOR COMPREHENSION/ Extract Based Extra Questions Read the following extracts and answer the questions that follow in one or two lines.

CBSE Question Paper Class XII

Student Activities. Death on the Nile. Part 1 (Chapters 1 5)

Fame. Learning Link. Now turn to page 166 and work out your score. Could you cope with being a celebrity? Do the quiz and find out.

Jesus said that to prove his divinity. You re not Jesus. It s not funny to even joke about.

SJK( C ) Pu Sze English Assessment ( 2 ) Paper 1 (Comprehension) Time : 1 hour 15 minutes

How to Write Dialogue Well Transcript

4. Praise and Worship (10 Minutes) End with CG:Transition Slide

Learning Welsh Studying Abroad, Spring 2018

IN MODERN LANGUAGE COMPOSED UPON WESTMINSTER BRIDGE

Three Wishes. Introduction This popular story starter can begin with an old story.

CHAPTER 3. The Grenade

UNIT TEN: HUMOR AND SATIRE

I ve worked in schools for over twenty five years leading workshops and encouraging children ( and teachers ) to write their own poems.

ENGLISH FILE. 5 Grammar, Vocabulary, and Pronunciation B. 3 Underline the correct word(s). 1 Order the words to make sentences.

How to solve problems with paradox

AN UTTERLY DISGUSTING CREATIVE PROJECT

Eliminating Redundancy

Importance of Recycling

in the park, my mum my sister on the swing. 2 In the sentence below, Dad booked the cinema tickets before he collected them.

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons


YOU'LL MISS ME WHEN I'M GONE. Written by. Richard Russell

DRAMA SCRIPTS - 3 x 5 minute plays Target audience: 7-11 year olds

Merry Christmas. It seems little Lucy was the star attraction!! Here s Kalissa and Lucy.

LARGE GROUP. Treasure Hunt! Lesson 3 June 24/25 1

The Kidz Klub 2. The Curse of the Step Dragon

Mrs. Staab English 134 Lesson Plans Week of 03/22/10-03/26/10

Sound UNIT 9. Discussion point

Prout School Summer Reading 2016

Williwaw Chapter Describe at least TWO specific ways that Ivan and Sep s lives are different from your life.

Stamp Out Name-Calling: A Good Choice Packet

7 + Entrance Examination Sample Paper English. Total marks: 50 Time allowed: 45mins

Unit 10 I ve Got My Flocab

ORCHARD BOOKS 338 Euston Road, London NW1 3BH Orchard Books Australia Level 17/207 Kent Street, Sydney, NSW 2000

Comprehensions. Workbook 1. for CEM. learn. develop. succeed. Fully classroom tested by Teachitright pupils - and approved by parents

Summary. Comprehension Skill. Name. What Jo Did. Activity. Activity. Cause and Effect

ESAME B2 GRAMMAR. 1 Complete the sentences with one word. 2 Complete the sentences with the correct word(s).

Magical. Happy. music cues Happy productive. You see, in our classroom the Science Guy song had a special message for my students:

Another One Bites the Dust

Transcript of Keith Urban interview with CircaNow radio, recorded June 24, 2011

Ñaïi Hoïc Quoác Gia TP.Hoà Chí Minh TRÖÔØNG PHOÅ THOÂNG NAÊNG KHIEÁU. ÑEÀ THI TUYEÅN SINH VAØO LÔÙP 10 NAÊNG KHIEÁU NAÊM HOÏC Moân Anh Vaên

Aristotle s Metaphysics

1 EXT. STREAM - DAY 1

10 for 10 Reading. Answers, marks and content domains. Commissioned by The PiXL Club Ltd. January 2018

Brooklyn Says OY! Brooklyn Responds YO! Deborah Kass at The Brooklyn Museum

Commonly Misspelled Words

McGraw-Hill Open Court Grade 4

Performing Your Music

It may not be the first time it has happened. But it is the first time it has happened to me. I am angry almost all the time. My friends and I stay

For a Boys Town Press catalog, call or visit our website: BoysTownPress.org. Publisher s Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Gold Experience B2 Progress test 1

Capitol Cadences. A Collection from Young Washington Poets 2018 Edition

Transcription:

Times Cryptic Crossword Number: 22836 Guide to the solution of the free demonstration crossword (cryptic, not concise!) found at http://www.timesonline.co.uk/crossword For each clue as written, words in red indicate the actual thing that is being defined (the meaning of the answer). Yellow-highlighted words indicate what you have to do to derive the answer from the clue words (fodder). Underlined words indicate the fodder. Across 1. Play shots in various directions that s what batsmen are into WHITES The word play tells you this is probably an anagram puzzle. Another word for shots is hits. various directions indicates the letters W and E (west and east), probably. So, take shots and we, mix them up, and you get something that batsmen wear: W + HIT + E + S. HARD, but evident once you get it. 5. Hint, short and dull, where one across say is situated CLUBLAND A hint is a clue, and if we shorten clue we get clu-. This doesn t help much, but the dull reference brought club to my mind. Since the part of the clue remaining references where something in the previous clue might be found, and since the previous clue ended up having to do with some type of Brit sporting activity, I guessed at CLUBLAND and decided to see if it checked out ultimately. VERY HARD can t figure where dull contributes, unless it refers to being blunt like a club. And the cricket/tennis references elude me. 9. God formerly protected round church PANTHEON The theo part is kind of obvious here, but the pan isn t. The Pantheon in Rome is a round church, and after a few letters were filled in from the cross words, I started thinking of that as a possibility. I still can t figure out where the formerly comes into play. HARD clue not transparent enough, even after you have the answer 10. Line I followed, extremely uniform LIVERY This is a pretty straightforward hidden-word type of clue which incorporates the seemingly ubiquitous, but senseless convention of using a word like line to mean the letter L. So we have an l, followed by an i, followed by a word meaning extremely very and we get the answer: L + I + VERY. MEDIUM the line = l convention makes this more difficult than it really is.

11. Antony s success with broken hip shown by painter The word broken preceding hip makes it pretty clear that at least part of this puzzle involves and anagram. I figured it was either something Mark Antony did + the letters H-I-P in some order that meant a painter, or some painter + the letters H-I-P that meant something Mark Antony did. Since my classical knowledge is pretty limited, I waited until I had a few more cross letters, but eventually Lippi as in Fra Lippi the Italian painter came to mind and I put the broken (i.e., anagramized) HIP in front of it to get Philippi: PHI + LIPPI. Appears to be the place where Antony defeated some republican forces. MEDIUM both the ambiguity of the fodder/definition and the somewhat erudite classical and renaissance references make this more challenging, but it s perfectly easy to derive the answer from the clue. 12. Be about to offer money for mineral BLENDE The tough part about this one was the solution I was expecting the name of a specific mineral. Otherwise, clue was pretty transparent I figured it was B E, with some word meaning to offer money in between. Lend crossed my mind: B + LEND + E, but the outcome blende didn t ring any bells, so this one was left undone. MEDIUM conventions were easy, but resulting answer wasn t clear to me 13. Had second thoughts, having given in one s notice REVIEWED Notice = view, but the clue isn t easy even with the answer I have a hard time back-working this to figure out exactly how to derive the final answer. HARD clue doesn t make much sense 15. Feel the heat, engaging a battle FRAY This was one of the first ones I got, because I already had the second letter R from another answer. The word engaging made it look as if there was a word meaning feel the heat with an a inserted in it and that resulting word meant the final answer battle. Feel the heat = fry, if we engage an a in fry, we get: FR + A + Y EASY the convention of engaging a was pretty clear to me 17. Loudly stir up emotional exchanges ROWS I spent oodles of time on this simple one, because it had two initial letters for other answers. Sigh. The convention word loudly indicates a possible homonym type of clue, which means that there s a word meaning stir up (rouse) that sounds like a word for emotional exchanges (rows). HARD shouldn t have been this tough, but I missed the homonym convention and was looking for an anagram because of the stir up.

19. Team of doctors in attempt at perfection PRACTICE This is probably the easiest type of clue the double-definition. No homonyms, hidden words, anagrams, puzzles just a word that means both a team of doctors and attempt at perfection. Unfortunately, once you get going with these, every time you see the word doctor you automatically think the answer must be an anagram (convention words for anagrams are words like doctor sick strange wrong bad mad etc all words that tell you that some word is messed up somehow to derive the answer (or part of it). The other thing that threw me off was the word in I thought perhaps there might be a hidden word, as in is often used to indicate that. Turns out it was easier than it looked a team of doctors is a practice, and in order to be perfect one has to practice. EASY as long as you don t work too hard and take it for what it is. 20. Finally select pope s headdress TURBAN You need to know that there was a Pope Urban. Take the final letter from select, which is a T and then the name of the pope: T + URBAN. REALLY HARD no apparent conventions or fodder in the clue itself unless there was a Pope Urban. 21. Sea flowing past bridge gap TIDEOVER Sea flowing = tide; past means over. EASY, if you think of bridging a gap as opposed to a gap in a bridge. 22. Dish witch offered to soldiers HAGGIS Another word for a witch is a hag. and an often-used synonym for solider is GI. Plural of GI is GIS, hence the answer: HAG + GIS. EASY, especially once you get used to the fact that GI is a normal stand-in for soldier in a cryptic clue. 23. Left city in hands of fool, in a manner of speaking IDIOLECT Fool = idiot and very often the word city is used to indicate the letters EC (the postal code for the City of London). The capital L in left is also to be used again, here we see a convention of using the first letter in a small word like left as part of the fodder. So we add the letters LEC to somewhere inside the word IDIOT and get something that means a manner of speaking: IDIO + LEC + T. MEDIUM the EC/city convention just has to be known. This clue also throws one off because the word speaking could have indicated a homophone-type clue.

24. Right to have cried out, breaking fine Spode RODERICK Even with the answer in front of me, I can t quite figure this one out. I suspect it s a type of anagram of R-C-R-I-E-D-O, but I still don t know where the K comes from. REALLY HARD I was stuck on china because of the Spode reference, but the answer refers to Roderick Spode, a fictional character in P.G. Wodehouse novels. Lost on this Yank. 25. Go and fetch device GADGET Sort of a hidden-word and synonym type of clue that doesn t tell you how to extract the right letters from the fodder. Use the G from get, and the A and D from and, add this to a synonym for fetch, which is GET, and get the answer: G + AD + GET. Sigh. REALLY HARD no apparent conventions in the clue itself. Down 2. Responses to roll-call shouted out? That s right HEAR HEAR Just a literal double-definition. Believe it or not, this was one of the first I filled in. MEDIUM the shouted out part of the clue tricks one into thinking it s a homophone clue. 3. Express disapproval over early edition of Guardian TUTELARY This is one of those great clues that gives you everything you need right in front of your eyes. Express disapproval = TUT; an edition of early means to anagramize the word early. The word over means that the TUT should come before the anagram of EARLY, and we get something that means a guardian: TUT + ELARY. MEDIUM you need to be pretty used to the conventions of over and edition. Also, the capitalized Guardian throws one off because it s the name of a newspaper here. 4. Naturally woken up, presumably, by all-night party SLEEPOVER Just another simple (!) double definition the answer means both woken up and all-night party. MEDIUM the naturally threw me off as well as the fact that one tends to make the clues more complicated than they often are.

5. Secret fear, finally being caught in credit fraud CONFIDENCE TRICK A secret means a confidence, and a confidence trick (con game) is a type of fraud. MEDIUM I couldn t figure out anything to do with the fear, finally being caught in credit part of the clue, but the length of the clue and the fact that there were two words and the first was probably confidence made it a bit easier. 6. Clear bishop ahead, took initiative and gave check BRIDLED To clear is to rid (something of something else). Put the B from bishop ahead of RID, add LED, which means took initiative and there s the answer: B + RID + LED. MEDIUM this is another of those cases where you have to use the initial letter of a word without knowing exactly why. 7. Fiery man having retired has gone mad ABEDNEGO Have fun with this obscure biblical reference. Answer is ABED ( having retired ) plus an anagram of GONE: ABED + NEGO. REALLY HARD because I didn t get the reference. Otherwise, a pretty straightforward clue. 8. Translated widely, as poet DAY LEWIS Cecil, not Daniel. Just an anagram of WIDELY AS cued by the word translated. MEDIUM not everyone, apparently, realizes there was actually a poet named Cecil Day-Lewis (father of Daniel, I think). But the real problem is that blasted comma between widely and as in the clue makes you think of anagramizing widely by itself, which of course doesn t give you the right amount of letters. 14. Good to be upset about murder: it s wrong EVILDOING The upset, about, and wrong cues all indicate a possible anagram, but it s not. I think that this is simply an &Lit (and literally true) type of clue no tricks, no cues, no fodder, just a weird definition of the answer. REALLY HARD another clue where even with the answer, I just can t figure out how to derive it, save for classifying it as &Lit. 15. Playwright s line saved by collector FLETCHER A collector is a fetcher, and if we insert the L from line (again, one of those stupid conventions), we get a playwright s name F + L + ETCHER (John Fletcher). HARD I just didn t have the reference in my stores of trivial knowledge. Otherwise, the clue is pretty straightforward except for the L < line convention.

16. Old woman stayed in, having got mean AVERAGED Old means aged, and a woman s name is Vera. Put VERA inside AGED and you get something that means the answer: A + VERA + GED. HARD Any clue that indicates a proper name by the use of girl, woman, boy, or man is pretty damn opaque in my book. For those of you who really care, some cryptic crossword guides actually supply lists of popular names that are often used by setters. I just think it s a mean trick. That said, the answer is either going to be something that means old (woman) or something that relates to getting the mean with a few cross clues filled in, averaged is the only thing that works. 17. Irritated about English business having shrunk RECOILED This is a lovely clue in my opinion, because everything in it has a purpose. Another word for irritated is riled. The proper noun English usually cues the letter E. Business could be lots of things, but here it cues CO. Now put RILED about (meaning around) the sequence ECO: R + ECO + ILED REALLY HARD no apparent conventions or fodder in the clue itself unless there was a Pope Urban. 18. A know-all on the water, I take new crew out WISEACRE Water = sea. Then it starts getting hard. New indicates that crew needs to be anagramized, and out seems to indicate that the letters from crew will be external to the word sea. And then there s that annoying single letter I. W + I + SEA + CRE means a know-all. HARD multiple conventions and lots of ambiguous fodder in this one, but with a few cross-clues, and the likelihood that the definition is know-all rather than out (common sense), it can be done. Not my idea of a good clue, however. 19. In worse physical condition, being comparatively mountainous PEAKIER Classic double-definition. The worse and comparatively in each of the phrases clues the type of clue. But peaky for sick doesn t really chime with me, so this was a bit off-putting. MEDIUM pretty clear that it was a double-definition, but the vocabulary got me stuck.