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PLEASE NOTE, SOLUTIONS WITHOUT ATTEMPTING THE ANNOTATIONS WILL BE DELETED
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ACROSS
1 Look, when training cat, keep it hungry (6) ASPECT {AS}{PE}{CaT}
5 Sober single man disheartened (6) SOLEMN {SOLE}{MaN}
10 Supported a party, chose to ignore the leader (7) ADOPTED {A}{DO}{oPTED}
11 Concentrate on selection (7) EXTRACT [DD]
12 Contradict female's opinion (6) BELIEF {BELIE}{F}
15 Son advances 3 places with passion to get a garment (1-5) T-SHIRT {T(+s)SHIR(-s)T}
16 Flight for asylum... (7) RETREAT [DD]
17 ...has no return, flying over west and south (4) OWNS {O{W}N<=}{S}
18 A good journo is old (4) AGED {A}{G}{ED}
19 Fearlessly support Victor, bank on to dethrone leader (7) BRAVELY {BRA}{V}{rELY}
20 Bones are edible, tasty in the centre (4) RIBS {aRe}{edIBle}{taSty}
22 Can a boy take first lesson on second week (4) ABLE {A}{B}{Le...n}{wEek}
25 Decorate and shine removing the top with some fancywork (7) FURNISH (-b+f)FURNISH
27 Man dwells in the middle of the building of worship (6) CHAPEL {CHAP}{dwELls}
31 Annoying work at a district (7) AWKWARD {WK} in {A}{WARD}
32 More irritated with earring breaking (7) ANGRIER*
33 Rest for mummies? Not one minute (6) OTHERS mOTHERS
34 Say, Sachin about to be replaced by one that's hostile (6) BITTER B(-a+i)ITTER
DOWN
2 Inflamed quarter, forgotten with change of heart (7) SWOLLEN {SW}{OL(-d+l)LEN}
3 English to replace director? Indecision with choice, say (6) EITHER (-d+e)EITHER
4 Cutback is the trend (4) TIDE<=
5 Noticed in case English kept (4) SEEN [T]
6 Dined in house with tea according to report that is most recent (6) LATEST {L{ATE}S}{(~tea)T}
7 Purpose of renaming? Dropping republican in a shuffle (7) MEANING rENAMING*
8 Around morning, British baron procures eggs and a plant (6) BAMBOO {B}{AM}{B}{OO}
9 Announced cost at Edinburgh's hidden (6) STATED [T]
13 Afraid it's far, fuel is leaking... (7) FEARFUL*
14 ...riding with medico on IV, is no good to begin with (7) DRIVING {DR}{IV}{Is}{No}{Good}
15 Everyone in trial is the most unbelievable (7) TALLEST {T{ALL}EST}
20 National in Carolina? No on moving (6) RACIAL CARoLInA*
21 Cover is empty, extremely emptiest (7) BLANKET {BLANK}{Em...sT}
23 Boy, somehow meet Di at 10 pm, perhaps (7) BEDTIME {B}{MEET+DI}*
24 Herr Orson hides mistakes (6) ERRORS [T]
25 Ironman has beer, becomes ladylike (6) FEMALE {FE}{M}{ALE}
26 Force gender change at the top in summit (6) HEIGHT (-f+he}HEIGHT
29 Calculates when receiving demand draft (4) ADDS {A{DD}S}
30 Young animal to escape on top of boat (4) LAMB {LAM}{Boat}
Reference List
Training = PE, Party = DO, Female = F, Son = S, West = W, South = S, Good = G, Journo = ED, Support = BRA, Victor = V, Boy = B, Work = WK, Minute = M, About = A, Quarter = SW, English = E, Director = D, House = LS(Lok Sabha), Republican = R, British = B, Baron = B, Man = M, Demand draft = DD
5D. SEEN - telescopic ca(seEn)glish
ReplyDelete32A. ANGRIER - anagram of earring
24D. ERRORS - telescopic H(err Or)son
14D. DRIVING - DR (medico) on IV is NG (no good)
What about the second I?
DeleteMedico(Dr) on (IV) (I)s (N)o (G)ood to begin with.
Delete9d- stated- announced, hidden in ( coST AT EDinburg)
ReplyDelete18a- aged- old ,A Good,journo is ED
25d- female- Iron is FE,Man is MALE,also Ale is beer. (Iron man- FEM,beer - ALE)
21d- blanket- cover ,empty- BLANK,,ET(extremely EmptiesT)
20a-ribs-bones,(aRe edIBle,taSty) in the centre
5a solemn single - SOLE and MAN- A
ReplyDelete27A CHAPEL from man - chap with el middle of dwell
22a can -able from A Boy Lesson wEek
12a Belief from contradict is belie with f of female
Typo - middle of 'dwells'
DeleteThree B's off to a flying start!
ReplyDelete🙏
Delete5a solemn (Single sole, mn- man -disgeartened)
ReplyDelete27a chapel ( chap - man, el - middle of dwells)
ReplyDelete30d lamb ( lam - escape, b - top of boat)
ReplyDelete"lam" - a new obscurity I learned today. Will keep it in my back pocket, for when I need to lam out of jail!
DeleteOr perhaps lam out of Bedlam
DeleteA slang from NAM, def needs an indication!
Delete20d racial ( Carolina, no 'on')
ReplyDelete"Racial" and "national" don't necessarily mean the same thing. Two people of the same race can have different nationalities and vice versa.
DeleteYea. A mokkai clue
DeleteAs pong as a good english dictionary (British OED was considered bible and any other colloq needed an indication. But thats also being given up these days in fav of online sources from America).
DeleteIn this case OED gives nation as synonym fot race. So.....
19A. BRAVELY - BRA(support) + V(victor) + ELY (bank on = RELY - R leader)
ReplyDelete3Dn EITHER - {(-d)(+E)ITHER}
ReplyDelete10a ADOPTED: supported
ReplyDeleteA(a)DO(party)PTED(opted: chose -o) leader ignored
34.a Sachin....batter
ReplyDeleteA replaced by i
Bitter...hostile
One is 'i'.
DeleteHow 'a' is obtained?
About = A
Delete15a T-SHIRT - garment
ReplyDeletepassion - thirst
's' (for son) moving 3 places left in thirst
{t(+s)hir(-s)t}
12a BELIEF: opinion
ReplyDeleteBELIE(contradict)F(female)
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ReplyDeleteOnly 5 per commenter
Delete8D British(b) baron(b) around morning(am) procures eggs(oo)
ReplyDeleteB(am)b(oo) - a plant
15d, most unbelievable = tallest
ReplyDeleteEveryone = all
Trial = test
Everyone in trial =
[T (all) EST]
34a, hostile = bitter
Say, Sachin = hitter
(H)ostile replaced with Be (b)
11a, concentrate on selection = extract, DD
29a, calculates = adds
When receiving Demand draft is
[A (DD) S ]
31 a, annoying = awkward
Annoying WorK = A wk
District = ward
34a hostile = bitter
ReplyDeleteDay, Sachin = batter
About = a
One = I
About to be replace with one
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ReplyDelete1ac aspect .
ReplyDeletewhen-as pe c(-a)t
Missing in anno: PE is training ("Physical Education")
Delete6D dined(ate) in house(ls- lok sabha) with tea(t) that is most recent
ReplyDelete- Latest
23d BEDTIME. (B)(MEET DI)*
ReplyDeleteBoy:B. Somehow(anind) (MEET DI)*
Definition : At 10 p.m. perhaps
17A has : owns
ReplyDeleteNo return :on
Over (w)est and (s)outh
on+w+s:owns.
33A rest:others
Mummies :mothers
Not one (m)inute
Mothers-m:others
7D purpise:meaning
Renaming minus (r)epublican:meaning
13D afraid: fearful
Anagram of far and fuel
25A decorate:furnish
ReplyDeleteShine:Burnish
Replace top (B) with (F)ancywork.
becomes furnish.
Yet to be solved
ReplyDeleteAcross - 28
Down - 2, 4, 26
28a TENDER: propose
ReplyDeleteT(-I+E)NDER
Tinder is online dating app
This is a replacement for 12a done at 8:04
2d SWOLLEN = Inflamed
ReplyDeleteSW = quarter
Olden = forgotten, with change of d by l = OLLEN
Did not understand how d is changed to l
Delete4D TIDE = trend; cut = edit, back is reversal indicator; so EDIT<==.
ReplyDelete26A summit:height
ReplyDeleteMy anno
Force is weight
Gender change at top: (W)oman changed to (h)e
Nope. Bit more cryptic there.
DeleteForce - fight
DeleteGender change f to he?
Height meaning summit🤔
Dr. ENT's solution seems to have more weight though.
DeleteForce is might.
Delete{(-m)(+he)height} ???
No gender change
DeleteDont think its that.
DeleteI took it as weight->height. Wife to husband, gender change of the spouse.
@Sree Sree +1, this parsing that you have given does make sense. Although in my opinion the clue ought be more specific that it is a spouse that is changing gender.
DeleteCan someone kindly clarify anno for 2d, as explained by HR at 1213. How does d change to L and relevance to change of heart?
ReplyDeleteCoincidentally, 2d and 26d have 'change'
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteOverall better fare than usual from AD. Most interestingly, there was an unusual grid having 38 clues, 4 adjacent unchecks in 4 places, and many a 4-letter word. There were several well-worded clues (such as 5A, 12A, 18A, 29D), and certainly fewer "obscure" usages than in yesterday's grid.
ReplyDeletePerhaps it is a matter of aesthetic preference or taste, but the surface reading on some of the clues beg for improvements. In my opinion, the setter should take trouble to make the clues read as much as possible like English that is naturally used outside of cryptic crosswords. This adds another layer to the cryptic element of the puzzle, which is to spot which words have a double-meaning within the crossword context. I find that Dr. X regularly produces such clues that on their own hint at various suggestive happenings (usually involving husbands, wives and drugs) and may misdirect the solver's attention.
For example, in 8D ("Around morning, British Baron procures eggs and a plant"), outside CW nobody would say they do something "around morning" (morning being a general time of day). Rather, we would use "around" to indicate a specific time, eg. "around 8AM in the morning". Similarly in 21D ("Cover is empty, extremely emptiest"), outside a CW it is grammatically redundant to say "extremely emptiest" as "emptiest" already implies a superlative or extreme quality. Similarly, there are numerous places where link-words are liberally used (eg. "of the" in 27A) which don't add any information related to the parsing, and in fact serve to obfuscate the solver's understanding of the intended parse. In 15A ("son advances 3 places with passion to get a garment"), passion is "Thirst" and the intended parse is for the S to move up front to make "t-shirt". It is more natural to say "son advances 3 places IN passion" for such a parsing.
That wasn't quite economic. Very nice analysis. While some idiosyncrasies may seem symptomatic, they define THC. Some discrepancies have been appearing more often than desired as economizer pointed out. Just my two cents.
DeleteGood to see a detailed and logical (from your point) presentation.
DeleteI just have two obs
1. Unchecks? Can you point where specifically.
2. The def of 27a
Should be "of the building...."
because chapel is a place of worship in a building and not the building per se.
I agree on "around morning", " Extremely emptiest" . Even with (it is being used unchecked)..
@Sree Sree,
Delete1. My mistake. I meant "4 adjacent checks in 4 positions". I am referring specifically to the areas around 13/16, 15, 25, and 26/28. Having 4 checks in such a configuration is quite uncommon in cryptics, although frequently seen in American-style crosswords like NYT.
2. If a chapel is not the building itself, but rather a part of a building of worship, then shouldn't the definition be something like "room of worship" rather than "of the building of worship"?
1. Totally agree that its not a typical THC grid.
DeleteTechnically correct grid but just so avoiding islands. (Just 2 gat's)
2. Again area/room of worship is always better but "of the..." Is not incorrect.
How is "of the" useful in differentiating between a building of worship and a room within a building of worship?
DeleteNice grid with some nice clues.
ReplyDeleteMy fav - SOLEMN, AWKWARD, EITHER.
Thanx AD