Friday, 29 July 2011

No 10219, Friday, 29 Jul 11, Gridman

ACROSS
1   - Dashing Russian woman footloose in middle age (7) - {R}{USHa}{IN}{aGe} RUSHING
5   - Loud knocker not finishing iced drink (6) - {F}{RAPPEr} FRAPPE
9   - Dog and animal doctor failing to complete turn (5) - {CUR}{VEt} CURVE
10 - Withdrawal from engineers' meeting announced (9) - {RE}{CESSION}(~session) RECESSION
11 - Courses of artist's instruments Poles removed (7) - {RA}{VIOLIns} RAVIOLI
12 - Supreme Court's cheer dissolved in sound of brakes (7) - {SC}{CREECH*} SCREECH
13 - Piece of land in motel site facing eastwards (5) - ISLET <-
14 - Keep the distance from old loofah that's dirty (4,5) - HOLD ALOOF*
16 - What you do when you retire (2,2,5) - GO TO SLEEP
19 - After endless tiff, station master gets twitch (5) - {SPAt}{SM} SPASM
21 - They report fresh Poles are going around the Middle East (7) - {NEW}{S{ME}N} NEWSMEN
23 - South Indian father to hang on edge-torn dress (7) - {APPA}{RELy} APPAREL
24 - Proverbially it catches worms (5,4) - EARLY BIRD [CD]
25 - Act in three quarters to settle (5) - {E}{N}{DO}{W} ENDOW
26 - A safety-first desi edited remarks we're not supposed to hear (6) - {A}{S}{IDES*} ASIDES
27 - Tolerate topless Eastern Railway's group of unpleasant people (7) - {bROOK}{E}{RY} ROOKERY
DOWN
1   - Deed writer that Abou Ben Adhem encountered (9,5) - RECORDING ANGEL [CD]
2   - Confess learner is dry (7) - {SHRIVE}{L} SHRIVEL
3   - Winter vehicle (7) - ICEBOAT [E]
4   - One who is stopped from paying debt here gains required letters (9) - GARNISHEE* New word for me
5   - Flying Officer's incomplete oath is the main concern (5) - {FO}{CUSs} FOCUS
6   - A scholar leaves one country for another (7) - AUSTRalIA AUSTRIA
7   - Book on no new card game (7) - {PRIMER}{On} PRIMERO
8   - When a woman is expectant (2,3,6,3) - IN THE FAMILY WAY  [CD]
15 - A member of a Finnic people, friend recalled space vehicle (9) - {LAP<-}{LANDER} LAPLANDER
17 - In the direction of hospital rooms (7) - {TO}{WARDS} TOWARDS
18 - Dog uncle and Scottish grandchild to end of Peterhead (7) - {SAM}{OYE}{D} SAMOYED
19 - Boss to drink more furiously (7) - {SUP}{REMO*} SUPREMO
20 - Cut a kind of loan (7) - {A}{BRIDGE} ABRIDGE
22 - Exemplar of slowness shifted small fasteners (5) - (-s)NAIL(+s)S NAILS

Photographs of Veer and his family



49 comments:

  1. 4 - One who is stopped from paying debt here gains required letters (9) - GARNISHEE* New word for me

    Two kinds nisi and absolute are usually used in commerce and banking textbooks.

    1a reminded me of the Pat and Mike crosstalk acts in PGW, which had lines like:

    Why is that woman rushing in and out of the stage?

    Because it is a Russian ballet

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  2. 16 - What you do when you retire (2,2,5) - GO TO SLEEP

    Raising the ghost of an old topic here:

    When MARITAL tuns MARTIAL, and/or when BEDROOM leads to BOREDOM, one goes to sleep, usually facing the other way ;-)

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  3. 7 - Book on no new card game (7) - {PRIMEROn} PRIMERO

    {PRIMER}{O(-n)}

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  4. 24 - Proverbially it catches worms (5,4) - EARLY BIRD [CD]

    As Calvin put it in yesterday's funnies:

    Ugh!

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  5. Sandhya @ 8:36,
    Thanks, I forgot the brackets

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  6. For once I'm a 24A. Nice crossword today. I do like the way gridman manages to get new words into his puzzles. Now tempted to dash to CCD for a cafe frappe.

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  7. Then you can have the first row of today's crossie:

    RUSHING FRAPPE

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  8. When I write greetings on tags to wedding presents, I combine the two Rs in MARRIED in such a way that the vertical line is only one (in the middle): not sure if the couples unwrapping gifts ever notice that!

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  9. Newly marrieds have no time to notice such things!

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  10. 1A anno should be RU SH(-E)IN (-A)G(-E)

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  11. Nice to see the mention of Abu Ben Adam too. It is one of the first poems I remember my mother reading to me. That and The Lady of Shallot. My absolute favourite though is Marvell's To His Coy Mistress. Anybody else want to divulge their favourite poems?

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  12. Suresh @ 9:10,
    Not necessarily

    Dashing = Definition
    Russian = R
    woman footloose = USH(-a)
    in = IN
    middle age = (-a)G(-e)

    ReplyDelete
  13. I'd rather side with Suresh's anno; as I said a few days back, having arbitrary proper names clued as boy or girl is always a pain.

    Yes David, I've quite a number of favourites. The most prominent ones being, Shirley's Death, the Leveller, Ozymandias, Frost's After Apple Picking and Mending wall, and a certain 'Gulzaman's Son' by a poet I do not remember :)

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  14. Pigtail, Village Schoolmaster, If, Gunga-Din, Six Honest Serving Men, The Charge of the Light Brigade, Lochinvar....

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  15. The Elegy written in a Country Churchyard

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  16. Do you think we should bring in Eskimo Nell here?

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  17. Dave

    You mention 'To His Coy Mistress' and I can quote from memory:

    But at my back I always hear
    Time's winged chariot hurrying near;
    And yonder all before us lie
    Deserts of vast eternity.

    Can't say when I realised the sexual imagery in the last few lines of that poem.

    I remember other poems with the 'carpe diem' theme (Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May). Favourites? Far too many to mention.

    My friends know how, when a word crops up, I recall lines from some poem or the other.

    My dad used to read poems to me and my siblings when I was a child (ABA, was one of them) and I remember him gratefully for getting me interested in Eng. Lit.

    Now, I am reading poems to my granddaughter who is on a visit from the US. Already, she writes poetry!

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  18. Not to forget:

    One Winter Night in August

    and Roald Dahl's poems based on Fairy Tales.

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  19. Re 1a.

    The setter's intended anno was Deepak's (at least when G checked the crossword on the day previous to the publication).

    But, it might have been the other one on the day G set the puz some six or seven months ago.

    Sometimes G fails to recall the wordplay, so he rewrites the clue so anno will be at hand!

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  20. It is definitely a poem of seduction, and I must admit I used it to woo my wife. The lines
    "the graves a fine and private place
    But none I think do there embrace"
    Stick in my mind.

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  21. Kishore@08:56

    Newly-weds 16a?

    At least I was acting the part of Columbus!

    ReplyDelete
  22. Dave

    While wooing we don't use English poetry. We use lines from Tamil film songs. This was in the Sixties and Seventies when lyrics were intelligible (now, it's cacophony).

    A man might tell a woman:
    Unnai kaanaadha kannum kann alla
    (The eyes that don't look at you aren't eyes)

    She, by no means coy, may say:
    Uththiravindri ulle vaa
    Unnidam aasaik konaen vaa
    (You need no permission to enter
    I long for you, enter)

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  23. CV 1001: Idiomatic sleep

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  24. @chaturvasi
    Love it' wish I had access to such lyrics in my gilded youth.

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  25. Dave

    Leave alone long poems such as 'The Pied Piper of Hamelin' or 'My Last Duchess' (on which I can write reams and reams), even little poems are memorable.

    Take Herrick's:

    Whenas in silks my Julia goes
    Then, then, methinks, how sweetly flows
    The liquefaction of her clothes.

    Next, when I cast mine eyes and see
    That brave vibration each way free,
    Oh, how that glittering taketh me!

    Women gliding in Kanchipuram silk saris must be attracting lot of attention!

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  26. Late in joining-Alas! Most of my favourite poems are already listed.Great ones,indeed.
    However,I would like to add one more-"A Psalm of Life"by Longfellow.A part of it-

    "Lives of great men all remind us
    We can make our lives sublime,
    And, departing, leave behind us
    Footprints on the sand of time;

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  27. Oh chaturvasi! Methinks we are twins. My last Duchess is a close runner up to Marvell. It is so elegantly chilling. Let's see if we can make it a hat trick - how about Shakespeare's "my mistress eyes are nothing like the sun"

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  28. Or

    'She was more beautiful than day'

    Would this apply to Doris Day ?

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  29. CV: What about your 'linear distance' ?

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  30. 'linear distance'?
    Kishore, It is not from a poem.
    It is from a Hardy novel.
    Let me try:
    "Her face, upturned from the microscope, was so sweet, sincere, and self-forgetful in its aspect that the susceptible Fitzpiers more than wished to annihilate the lineal yard which separated it from his own."
    Can you be more roundabout than this to say ... guess what.

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  31. Hi,
    Please explain the 'TO' part in 17 d.

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  32. Dave

    Lack of adornment in a woman does not stop a man from loving her?

    Love is not love / Which alters when it alteration finds...

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  33. 17: Entire clue acting as wordplay?

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  34. CV, my bad. Woodlanders. The shortest way of expressing that is x.

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  35. No, not exactly your bad, Kishore.

    I may have used the words 'linear distance' myself.

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  36. Kishore - elegantly succinct!

    My final poetic offering by Emily Dickinson which was brought to mind by yesterday's assuage

    They say that time assuages
    Time never did assuage
    An actual sorrow hardens
    As sinews do from age

    From memory so apologies if it's not quite right

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  37. As a lawyer, I always appreciate grids featuring obscure legal terms (garnishee). Thanks :D

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  38. We had ALTER EGO from Gridman yesterday (1 Ac). Here's how it has been clued in HT today:
    An army officer before leave becomes close friend (5,3)

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  39. .. and ORIGAMI, which appeared on Wednesday, has been clued in HT as

    It’s crafty folding yellow periodical up in two (7){OR}{I{(GAM<-)I}

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  40. I find that ORIGAMI has been clued by G six times so far, each time a different version.

    He is not quoting them in case he should find the word again among his gridfills and, having exhausted all wordplay, has to fall back on one of these!

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  41. I didn't read Frost or Emily Dickinson in college but both were my favourite poets and I have their complete works in my library (read: packed with other books in a carton among others on the loft).
    I believed 'there's no frigate like a book'.

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  42. A nightingale that all day long...
    Cannons to the right of them...
    What is this life, if full of care..

    These are among a few poems even today I sometimes
    feel my Dad is reading aloud to me... Now I wish I should have sat with him more and listened to many more in his lovely voice.... CV must have been more luckier...

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  43. Hi,
    Can you help me with the below?

    5A - How did F come?

    9A - How did Cur come?

    6D - How did you remove AL?

    (Sorry, I am a newbie. Hence bugging you guys!)

    ReplyDelete
  44. Hi Labak,

    5A - F = forte, comes from "Loud." F is used to denote a loud passage in music.

    9A - CUR comes from "dog." It's a kind of dog.

    6A - AL = A Scholar (where scholar = learner = student = L). It's removed 'cause the clue says, A scholar (AL) leaves one country (AUSTRALIA) to another (making it AUSTRIA)

    ReplyDelete

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