ACROSS
1 - A trader in rehab's heard spluttering (11) - HABERDASHER*
9 - Faraway soldier's group not in position (7) - {OUT}{POST}
10 - Tried to deal with ropes and pulleys, died (7) - {TACKLE}{D}
11 - Greek character at the river mouth (5) - DELTA [DD]
12 - Does it bring a breath of fresh air to a star? (3,6) - FAN LETTER [CD] This is the closest word I could think of, but why fresh air?
13 - Soldier and engineer combine to mock and scoff (4) - {GI}{BE}
15 - Type of crystal to confound doctor no end (7) - {DEN{DR}ON*}
19 - Conservative chap receives greeting from a brute (7) - {C}{AVE}{MAN}
20 - Short request for prompt action (1,1,1,1) - A S A P [E]
24 - Part of the sleeve that binds wart somehow (9) - WRISTBAND*
25 - Mischievous like some cruel finaglers (5) - ELFIN [T]
27 - Roman goddess found pitman initially very attractive (7) - {MINER}{V}{A}
28 - The beginning of a name (7) - INITIAL [CD]
29 - Where you could sweat it out in Ankara? (7,4) - TURKISH BATH [CD]
DOWN
1 - Prone to anger, the Spanish get a place to stop (5) - {HOT}{EL}
2 - Born friend goes around head office in State capital (6) - {B}{HO}{PAL}
3 - Give assent to a deserter provided youth leader follows (6) - {RAT}{IF}{Y}
4 - A time to make a bid for one who waits (8) - {A}{T}{TENDER}
5 - Large estate and home that had a nice build-up (8) - HACIENDA*
6 - Brothers, sisters and so on (9) - RELATIONS [CD]
7 - The captivity that Maugham wrote about (7) - BONDAGE [CD]
8 - Decorate British sailors after a party (5) - {A}{DO}{RN}
14 - Edible thing that Liza burnt accidentally (6,3) - BRAZIL NUT*
16 - His job is to talk to students! (8) - LECTURER [E]
17 - Queen, big one in India (8) - MAHARANI [CD]
18 - It can spin a yarn (7) - SPINDLE [CD]
21 - Vivekananda, for one (5) - SWAMI [CD]
22 - Somewhat unusual to find something to eat after party is over (6) - {OD<-}{DISH}
23 - Change in gear for a ruler (6) - REGINA*
26 - Trust in religion (5) - FAITH [DD]
Hello everyone
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed solving this. HABERDASHER (heard this word after a long time), OUTPOST, TACKLED, DELTA, FAN LETTER (common expression is fan mail), GIBE, DEWDROP, CAVEMAN, RSVP(Merci beaucoup, Monsieur Sankalak), WRIST BAND, ELFIN, MINERVA, INITIAL, TURKISH BATH (for a moment got mixed up with Accra and went looking for some Ghanaian stuff), HOTEL, BHOPAL, RATIFY, ATTENDER, HACIENDA, BONDAGE, ADORN, BRAZIL NUT, LECTURER, MAHARANI, SPINDLE, SWAMI, ODDISH, REGINA, FAITH - all solved in good time.
Good sprinkle of geography - India, Spain, Italy, France, Greece etc.
12 - Does it bring a breath of fresh air to a star? (3,6) - FAN LETTER [CD] This is the closest word I could think of, but why fresh air?
ReplyDeleteA fan - oscillating or ceiling one - brings fresh air. That is my guess.
Sorry I was wrong at DENDRON and ASAP. (In the latter case, RSVP also fits in to some extent!)
ReplyDeleteIn places like Chennai, a fan would bring in nothing but hot air.
ReplyDeleteA couple of nice-sounding words. HACENDIA, HABERDASHER etc.
ReplyDelete6D: could relatives and relations be used interchangeably? I put it as "relatives." "Relations" seemed like a broader term to define "brothers, sisters and so on."
VJ
ReplyDeleteYour distinction is rather personal.
Chambers definitions
relative: a person who is related by blood or marriage.
relation: a relative by birth or marriage.
I hope The Hindu Crossword doesn't fall down to the standard of this report!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.thehindu.com/news/states/andhra-pradesh/article582636.ece
Giridhar,
ReplyDeleteWhat's the connection between the article and the CW? I don't get it.
Chaturvasi, that's how I saw it and hence used the word "seemed." I don't deny that I could have been wrong.
ReplyDeleteWell while we could have a relationship with somebody who's not our family, a relative would always be a part of the family. That's why I raised the question.
A crossword scam?? That would be funny.
ReplyDeleteBased on Chaturvasi's definition quoted from Chambers can anyone name a Relative who is not a Relation or vice versa?
ReplyDeleteI see no difference between the two words. I believe that either of the two words can be used in a sentence such as:
ReplyDeleteThe munificent zamindar gave shelter and food to half-a-dozen poor relatives/relations.
My intention in citing the defs. from the dict. was to emphasise the point that both are the same in the context of brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, etc.
If somebody's related by birth, they are related by blood too right. I took it to be the same.
ReplyDeleteWish usage was related to relative behavior - because, I often relate better to friends than to relatives.
ReplyDeleteThe above definitions do not cater for adopted children!
ReplyDeleteSorry Deepak,
ReplyDeleteSince it is often felt in this forum that the Hindu crossword would be better served by having a crossword editor, the article linked (in the same paper) seems to indicate that even with an editor (for news articles there is an editor?) there is no guarantee that things would be better. The last paragraph/sentence in the article linked is incomprehensible.
Perhaps I am drawing a conclusion from a minimal sample and imagining a link where none exists!
Giridhar,
ReplyDeleteHaving reread the last para of the article, I now get your point.