What larks! Three quarters of this little beauty done in under fifteen minutes, with occasional recourse to a sip of the grog. The north-west corner was looking odd, with a two-letter word ending in V and another V lurking in 1a. I re-checked 6d in case I'd made a typo, the anagram was clear enough. Then I dimly remembered my Merchant of Venice for O Level and popped in 3d. Back to 9a. I'm not keen on that as a two-letter word ending in V, but it had to be, unless the answer was a regnal number. I didn't know the phrase, but it fits the word play. The light dawned on 1a, once I saw the double definition. Leaving us with 2d, H_A_T. Only one thing it could be, but as I write this a completely satisfactory explanation escapes me.
The other three-quarters of the puzzle I thought was witty in places, notably 8d, but not difficult.
Definitions underlined, anagrinds in italics.
The other three-quarters of the puzzle I thought was witty in places, notably 8d, but not difficult.
Definitions underlined, anagrinds in italics.
Across | |
1 | Break up in manifest cold (6) |
SHIVER - double definition. The expression 'shiver me timbers' dates back a few hundred years before Robert Newton in Treasure Island, where the word 'shiver' has the meaning 'break up' or shake apart, as in a cannonball or large wave hitting a ship. And if you're shivering, you're manifesting being cold. | |
5 | Give woodwork final smoothing, receiving time and a half (5-3) |
STAND-OFF - SAND OFF = final smoothing of the woodwork, insert T for time. Stand-off being a rugby term for one of the two half-backs, the one who is not the scrum half. | |
9 | Fall asleep in wagon, very voyeuristic viewing (3-5,2) |
CAR-CRASH TV - CART = wagon, insert CRASH for fall asleep, and V for very. I didn't know the term, but I see it is in Collins and not only applied to scenes of cars getting totalled, although YouTube has no shortage of those. Somehow I don't think of TV as a two-letter word, more of an abbreviation, or the internet domain name for Tuvalu. Which used to be a Pointless answer. | |
10 | Pipe suddenly lowered for sounding (4) |
DUCT - Sounds like 'ducked' = suddenly lowered. Duck! | |
11 | In fight, large Italian twisting blade (8) |
STILETTO - SET TO = fight, insert L IT reversed (twisting). | |
12 | Put off woman and survive without one (6) |
SHELVE - SHE = woman, L(I)VE = survive, remove the I. | |
13 | Religion, but no Mass, for Scots girl (4) |
ISLA - ISLAM loses its Mass. | |
15 | To wed money, they say, can be a bloomer (8) |
MARIGOLD - MARI sounds like marry, GOLD = money. | |
18 | Cherries, see, covered in fungi (8) |
MORELLOS - Insert LO = see, into MORELS a tasty kind of mushroom. | |
19 | Pressure on buzzer creates alert (4) |
BEEP - Add P for pressure to BEE for buzzer. Seen this before recently, probably on a Sunday. | |
21 | A Sikh has one billion fish (6) |
BANGLE - B for billion, ANGLE verb to fish. All Sikhs have a bangle or KARA, one of the five K's. | |
23 | Concerned with opening blade, I trust (8) |
RELIANCE - RE = concerned with, then insert I into LANCE = blade. | |
25 | Some beef? Wrong to eat horse (4) |
SHIN - Insert H for horse into SIN = wrong. | |
26 | A detective story, the ultimate gift for cellist? (3,4,3) |
HIS LAST BOW - Double definition, one a suggestion. Conan Doyle published a collection of Sherlock Holmes stories under this title. Not sure why our setter chose a cellist, as Sherlock played the violin! | |
27 | Not happy to travel regularly on such rubber? (5-3) |
CROSS-PLY - CROSS = not happy, PLY = travel regularly. Do cross-ply tyres still exist on new cars? Maybe in India. | |
28 | Old guard losing heart a total failure (6) |
TURKEY - TURNKEY loses its N, i.e. middle letter or heart. |
Down | |
2 | Enthusiasm of boxer finally ready to mate? (5) |
HEART - MY LOI because I couldn't parse it to my satisfaction. My current explanation of this is a little woolly, something to do with being ON HEAT = being ready to mate and R (boxer finally) being inserted. But there's no 'ON' and HEAT alone doesn't. mean ready to mate. I suppose 'to mate' could be doing double duty, meaning 'mate' the R with the HEAT? Explain. | |
3 | Dither, as everyone is caught up in active moving (9) |
VACILLATE - ALL inside (ACTIVE)*. | |
4 | Head from court case over to business centre (6) |
RIALTO - (T)RIAL = court case without 'head', add TO. 'What news on the Rialto?' says Salanio to Salarino in the MoV, Act 1, talking business. | |
5 | Son indifferent about husband, I emphasise in my case, as one dealing with children (15) |
SCHOOLMISTRESSY - Messy wordplay for a clumsy old word. S for son, insert H for husband into COOL = indifferent, then insert I STRESS into MY. | |
6 | Warning notice avoids funny lines (8) |
ADVISORY - (AVOIDS)*, RY = (railway) lines. | |
7 | Magistrate seizes duke in quick move (5) |
DODGE - Insert D into DOGE. | |
8 | Apparently that of Helen being a thousand ships? (4,5) |
FACE VALUE - &lit. Witty, if it's original. | |
14 | Struggling actor hems old garment (9) |
STOMACHER - (ACTOR HEMS)*. | |
16 | Rock, overturning large table across front of room (9) |
GIBRALTAR - BIG reversed (overturning large), ALTAR = table, insert R(oom). | |
17 | In public he rubbishedsafe sort of investment (4-4) |
BLUE-CHIP - (PUBLIC HE)*. | |
20 | Be very eager to employ Liberal, one that’s flexible (6) |
PLIANT - PANT = be very eager, insert L and I. | |
22 | Kind of an Einstein? Not I (5) |
GENUS - Einstein was a GENIUS, remove the I (not I). | |
24 | Cutpart of bulb (5) |
CLOVE - Double definition. |