Some enjoyable, though ticky tricky, definitions from Buzzer today.
ACROSS
1 Cold liquor with a hint of barley grain (5) CRUMB {C}{RUM}{B}
4 Group is mostly loyal to ultimate cause (9) COMMITTEE {COMMITTEd}{E}
9 British queen about to appear in slip (7) BLOOMER {B}{LOOM}{ER}
10 Singular burning urge to eat a date or sweet (7) SUGARED {S}{UG{A}RE*}{D}
11 Sign of rickshaw alongside a tree perhaps (9) AUTOGRAPH {AUTO}{GRAPH}
12 In absentia, Ravenclaw’s diadem (5) TIARA [T]
15 Judas and people he betrayed (8) PEEPHOLE* Never knew that most of us had a Judas at home!!
18 Double check the development of staff (8) STUNTMAN {STUNT}{MAN}
19 Publicity in charge faced backlash temporarily (3,3) PRO TEM {PRO} {TEM<=}
22 After delayed start, talk gas (5) ARGON jARGON
24 Creatively bloody low film industry (9) BOLLYWOOD*
26 Shape or form of carbon (7) DIAMOND [DD]
27 Loads of delays in broadcast (7) WEIGHTS (~waits)
28 Gives out order to send spies (9) DISPENSES*
29 Before time like a nobleman? (5) EARLY [DD]
DOWN
2 Regular curbs on anti-German warship (1-4) U-BOAT cUr-Bc On AnTi
3 Please do visit our home (2,2,5) BE MY GUEST [CD] [DD] - See comments
4 Breakfast item ordered on the phone (6) CEREAL (~serial)
5 Evil description of Bond’s boss? (8) MISCHIEF {M}{IS}{CHIEF}
6 Gathered under popular bar (5) INGOT {IN}{GOT}
7 Hill on a front converted to Shivaji’s stronghold (5,4) TORNA FORT {TOR}{A FRONT}* Been there twice on a hike while at Pune.
8 Aged men sadly in final stages (7) ENDGAME*
14 Girl under rough training for a figure like this? (9) HOURGLASS {ROUGH*}{LASS}
Which is your shape? |
18 Burnt and dead inside like a fish? (7) SCALDED {SCAL{D}ED}
20 Simplicity in style followed by a primitive dwelling (7) MODESTY {MODE}{STY}
21 Every other cult has more than one fool (6) CLOWNS {CuLt}{OWNS}
23 Rising in honour of a stoned woman? (5) NIOBE {NI<=}{OBE}
25 Distinct feature of hypnotherapy (5) OTHER [T]
A to Q under 14d
ReplyDelete1d
What is this, Kishore?
DeleteI was about to ask the Col as to whom among his readers does he expect to answer his question under 14d and you, like a mundrikottai have come with a cryptic reply.
I was always under the impression that these terms relating to body shapes applied only to women.
I just can't imagine a man having an hourglass appearance or did one with gynecomastia failed to correct it?
Why female only? Most of the ace body builders have hourglass figures.
DeleteA to Q - Answer to question :-P
DeleteMost bodybuilders have V-Shaped figures
DeleteThat V is part of the upper half of an hourglass
Delete@CV: Better to be a mundrikottai than an OCOM !
DeleteIs mundrikottai an equivalent of haazirjawab in Urdu? Just curious to know.
DeleteLiteral meaning is 'kajubi', but idiomatically since the acaju kernal protrudes out of the apple, it means one who jumps the gun...
DeleteAnd if it means 'cashewnut', what's the context?
DeleteKishore seems to have answered my question in the meantime, and also admitted he is one..;-)
DeleteRef 910
DeleteHeads Up:
DeleteAs I launch my new line of work on Thursday, Aug 15th, hereafter, the gun may be the subject of a ceasefire after 9am till I return to the roost
Something like "Late Lateef"?
DeleteThe nut in Cashew fruit is outside. That's the context. Eager Beaver. :)
DeleteThe nut in Cashew fruit is outside. That's the context. Eager Beaver. :)
DeletePl read kernel for kernal in 917
DeleteBTW, OCOM is 'Oppukku chappani, Oorukku mankottai'
DeleteSomething similar to the Kannada, 'AaaTakke unTu, lekkake illa'
Like to have English version too please !
DeleteLoosely translated it means, 'Counted in for fun, but out of the reckoning for all practical purposes'.
Delete15 Judas and people he betrayed (8) PEEPHOLE* Never knew that most of us had a Judas at home!!
ReplyDeleteI only knew of Judas'Gate
11 Sign of rickshaw alongside a tree perhaps (9) AUTOGRAPH {AUTO}{GRAPH}
ReplyDelete'Sign' of Buzzer having lived in Pune/ Maharashtra, where Rickshaw: Auto and in the South Auto: Autorickshaw
Yesterday, my ref to KO was an error. But before that PTO was a ref where O = Over
ReplyDelete3 Please do visit our home (2,2,5) BE MY GUEST [CD]
ReplyDeleteIs this a DD? Do visit our home = BE MY GUEST = Please
Regarding Rawalpindi and Delhi, I quote a remarkable anecdote from The Freedom at Midnight:
ReplyDelete"... was a telephone line linking India and Pakistan. Thanks to that line it was still possible for Rawalpindi 1704 to call a number which might have been a world away, New Delhi 3017. Those were the private numbers of the Commanders-in-Chief of the Pakistani and Indian armies. They were British. They were close friends. They were former comrades in the old Indian Army.
Just before five o'clock on the afternoon of Friday, 24 October, Maj.-Gen. Douglas Gracey, replacing General Messervy who'd been sent to London, got his first intimation of what had happened in Kashmir through a secret intelligence report. It gave the raiders'strength, armament and their location. Gracey did not hesitate. He immediately went to the private phoe in Messervy's quarters and communicated that precious information to the last man Jinnah would have wanted to get it, the man who commanded the only force which could deny Kashmir to the raiders, the Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Army .
Lt.-Gen. Sir Rob Lockhart, a Scot and a Sandhurst classmate of Gracey's, was stunned by his old friend's report. He in turn communicated it to two more people, both of them English: the Governor-General, Lord Mountbatten, and Field-Marshal Auchinleck."
Nice one from Buzzer. Didn't notice too many clues infested with parasites. So wonder why the Col. felt so ;)
ReplyDeleteI Had 22A ~(Hour gone).
I had 22A as ~(Hour gone).
DeleteMay be the ticky reference is to me :) I did say ...A bee in one's bonnet... in the grid. Didn't I?
DeleteNow that you mention it...
DeleteIn the second and fourteenth row...
Very nice one buzzing around in 2 and 14.
DeleteIs 3 D a DD?
Yes Raghu, it is: Please do // visit our home
DeleteTICK(s) removed using TRICK(s) :-)
ReplyDeleteI, at first though TICKY was a typo?
DeleteAnd time to put up the highlighted solution grid, Deepak
DeleteYes it was and it turned out to be an unitentional one as I did not see the Nina.
DeleteBuzzer "The Trickster" ! He played tricks yesterday and today as well !!
DeleteGobi and Cabbage???
ReplyDeleteGobi in hindi is Cabbage. In fact 'Bundh Gobi' for cabbage and 'Phool Gobi' for Cauliflower and if I am not wrong 'Gaant Gobi' (Gaant is Knot) for Knol-Khol
DeleteI think VJ probably means Gobi required reference to the Indian word?
DeleteBut, I like the plausibility in the clue conn. China to Gobi (desert)
Oh, I didn't know the Hindi word for Cabbage.
DeleteI think VJ has a point. There should have been an indicator to signal an Indian/Hindi word
DeleteThe English language adapts words from a variety of languages including Hindi. Chambers has:
Deletegobi (n): A cabbage or cauliflower. ORIGIN : Hindi and Punjabi
Why would it need an indicator any more than say
autograph (n) : A signature. ORIGIN : Greek autos + graphein ?
None of the online ones had it. Hence my comment @10:41.
DeleteI hardly know any Hindi and I thought Gobi was a different vegetable altogether.
DeleteWell I ain't never had no Gobi Manchurian with Cabbages in 'em and hence my surprise.
Ramesh you would have got a whole load of links if you searched for 'Gobi' Manchurian :-)
DeleteLinks yes. But no Dictionary ref to Gobi :). Possibly the first time I think I have seen the online dictionaries not having a word which is available in the printed edition.
DeleteOxford dictionary online has it :) http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/gobi?q=Gobi
DeleteCabbage, in North India, is known as 'bund gobhi', and cauliflower is 'phool gobhi'.
ReplyDeleteTricky puzzle to-day, couldn't complete it!
Gridman once had the following clue:
ReplyDelete27 Desert town near Erode in south India (4)
Reference to Gobichettypalayam ? Is that called Gobi too?
DeleteUncle Google helps confirm that the above is true. It ( Should it be he ?) also says it is spelled as Gobichettipalayam.
DeleteHad been to Gobi near Erode way back in 1966 for an Annual Training NCC Camp from school.
DeleteTravelling from CBE, as you just enter Gobi at left there is a famous marriage hall in spacious grounds. I have attended one or two weddings there.
DeleteAnd my father once worked for Gubbi & Co in Bombay.
DeleteI think 'gubbi' in Kannada means sparrow!
DeleteAlso, there is a town called Gubbi near Bangalore. A famous Kannada thatre director Gubbi Veeranna was from that place. There used to be a Gubbi Veeranna Theatre in Majestic area of Bangalore.
DeleteChambers on my machine has the sense 'vegetable' for Gobi.
ReplyDeleteThe online Chambers does not have it because it isi what is called the 21st Chambers Dictionary that is an abridged dictionary eliminating archaic, obsolete, Scot and other language derivations.
GOBI had appeared as 21A in No.10565, Tuesday 11 Sep 2012 by Skulldugger, but without any specific definition.
DeleteI thought Gobi was well understood as cauliflower in many places.
There I thought it was ref to the desert
Delete1D :I too took GOBI for the desert ! Anyway am happy to get pass marks 60% today !!
ReplyDeleteMy aoologies to all & VJ. I wrongly ascribed the comment re the Indian signal for Gobi to him which set the cat among the pigeons-;)
ReplyDeleteI don't know Hindi but I know the Hindi terms for some vegetables because the cook/bearer/maid in our IAF quarters used to mention them.
ReplyDeleteAdded to this was the Sutton's Seeds catalogue that my father, interested in gardening, used to get.
Thus I remember barbati, kohlrabi and so on. Ah, do we have a theme there? Maybe or maybe not!
Is any visitor put off by these tangential Comments?
ReplyDeleteDoes itt ake away from the merit of the crossword?
Should comments be confined strictly to the clues and their workings, classifications, nits, pans and pots?
If it were to be confined to the clues etc., we would need NJ back to give life to this blog.
DeleteTruly well said !!!
Delete@ CV sir, without comments and discussions this blog will be like a dull classroom :)
Delete+1
DeleteWe've all appreciated a very nice, well written puzzle. I don't think there's any harm in involving in a bit of banter.
ReplyDeleteThese are the last two days of my banter and I am sure Richard, Raghu and MB will keep it going...
DeleteWhy?
DeleteHe is getting into a situation that will keep him away from the PC and home for certain hours during the day when he will be adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing without any distraction and detraction. The summer will be working through all seasons.
DeleteGood way to sum it up
DeleteKishore @ 1.33
DeleteWe will be badly missing you and your "SHORE"(noise) for sure. As far as banter is concerned, you are the source and others used to take cue. I'm after all a "cog in the wheel". You have forgotten Renga who can set the ball rolling jolly well !(Not to forget many others)
He is sure to keep a few of us unemployed...
DeleteIf it is put to poll, there could be a landslide in favour of K's staying active here...
DeleteAgree, folks?
Certainly.
Delete15A : What is Judas, the traitor, doing with the peephole !? TRAITOR = PEEPHOLE ?
ReplyDeleteFrom Col's link : Judas(n) : a peephole or a very small window in a door Also called judas window judas hole
DeleteThere is also a Judas Kiss. This is used in the context of an act of betrayal, especially one disguised as a gesture of friendship.
ReplyDeleteThis also bears a biblical allusion to the betrayal of Christ by Judas Iscariot (Matt. 26:48).
Thanks RameshJ and Nadathur Rajan for enlightening me !
ReplyDeleteMB,
DeleteI think I had mentioned it to someone else earlier that unusual words are normally provided with a link in the main post (underlined words mean there is an embedded link) which if you follow will take you to a page with more details on that word. Like PEEPHOLE in the main post has got a link embedded.
Sorry Col.Saheb ! Yes, you did mention about the links meant for peculiar/new words, some time back. Generally I do go through them. Today it was a slip on my part.
DeleteDeepak & Buzzer:
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments on mine yesterday. I do appreciate that my comments go in late and hence I tend to overlook those from others. I wonder whether any one even bothers to read the tail-end comments of minef each day. MB had confirmed that he did.
Bhavan:RawalPindi vs.Delhi-- comments were tongue-in-cheek relating to the current frosty relationship between India and Pakistan, frosty more on the Pak side and warmer from the Indian. India bears all the brunt of their cold- shouldering and barbs whereas India's bear-hugs with them seem to be unbearably hot for them !! -- My comments had nothing to do with your cluing which I did find a bit offbeat and out-land-ish .
Today's crossie is another one that sent me buzzing for answers, flitting like a drunken bee !!
GOBI- a nice decoy clue to get the solvers off-guard !!
Incidentally, with all due respects to my muslim- lady friends, my wife calls the Hijab that is worn by the ladies from the Bohra community as a Bandh-Gobi as they are covered head to foot , not necessarily black but in multi-colours !! No offence meant to any one please !
And there in Coimbatore, Indian restaurants do cater Gobi Manjurian- I used to take it as a Manjari having married a Gopi. !!
Raju, in spite of your disclaimers, I for one found your "joke" about hijab extremely distasteful.
DeleteI'm extremely sorry, Bhavan, but I had very honestly meant my disclaimer, believe me !!
DeleteSorry for any ruffled feathers and hurt sentiments .It was a harmless comment with no bad intent on my part and I shall refrain in future.