Tuesday 21 December 2010

No 10030, Tuesday 21 Dec 10, Gridman

ACROSS
1   - Kind enough to study desi's alternative tax (11) - {CON}{SIDE*}{RATE}
9   - Take care of small charges? (7) - BABYSIT [E]
10 - Rough smooches, with one ring thrown away, for dunderheads (7) - SCHMOESo*
11 - Jewish teacher to chatter endlessly (5) - RABBIt
12 - Branches of such trees will no doubt sway (9) - WINDSWEPT [CD]
13 - A foreign capital's smell (5) - {A}{ROMA}
15 - Buff to shout at round-eyed learner leaving (9) - {YELL}{OWlISH}
18 - Tab Stella provided for what may be in a cellar (5,4) - TABLE SALT*
21 - Editor accepts honour to place a journalist with troops (5) - {E{MBE}D}
22 - Disney forte brought into a main combine (9) - ANIMATION*
24 - Dance with strange beat regularly (5) - {RUM}{B}{A}
 
26 - Pay no heed to omission (7) - NEGLECT [DD]
27 - Good tidings from some level, kind person (7) - {lEVel}{ANGEL}
28 - Traveller in precipitate movement (11) - PERIPATETIC New word for me
DOWN
1   - One who is on a virtual trip? (9) - CYBERNAUT [CD]
2   - Rich man imposes prohibition back on senior (5) - {NAB<-}{OB}
3   - Start to look into removing initiators of venal efforts (9) - INveSTIGATE
4   - Tea spills on a road in Erode (3,4) - {EAT*} {A}{WAY}
5   - Magazine of Indian army in a real hollow (7) - {A}{Rea{SENA}L}
6   - Spirit the last of those summoned up (5) - (+e)ETHOS(-e)
7   - Wing, a number heard, doesn't begin to move up (8) - (~four){FORE}{cLIMB}
8   - ''Money — everything” (4) - IS'NT [E]
14 - Zero vote to connect with universities (8) - {O}{X}{BRIDGE}
16 - Lose temper about ill-organised race in public case (9) - {OVER{REAC*}T}
17 - Chair duly operated by a sort of mechanical means? (9) - HYDRAULIC*
19 - Pilot used a Roman road before decay set back in (7) - {A}{VIA}{TOR<-}
20 - Pre-University teens, agitating, become nervous (5,2) - TENSE UP*
22 - Aggravating condition needing emollient initially (4) - {A}{C}{N}{E}
23 - Devoured completely (3,2) - ATE UP [E]
25 - Pronouncedly little creature's great power (5) - (~mite)MIGHT

46 comments:

  1. Hi
    “Esteemed fellows, the gemfulness of this crossword was terrific”: A-R(SENA)(-ea)L, EAT* A-WAY, +E-THOS(-e), ~4(-c)LIMB, TABLE SALT*, YELL-OW(-l)ISH. SHCMOES(-o)* might be happy to have a RABBI following just at 11a followed 10a. Though both are Jewish usages, the first one has roots from Yiddish, while the second one (hold your breath) is from the Arabic root, rab, which is oft used as rabba in our Hindi songs .
    The instruction EAT AWAY was followed with the response ATE UP. Erode starred again. The hyphen in 8d masquerading as a blank is a good subterfuge, ISNT it ? Both NABOB and round eyed reference from 15a brought memories of Hurree Jamset Ram Singh the Nabob of Bhanipur (those familiar with his English would have recognised the line above in quotes) and his owlish spectacled friend Billy Bunter, the Owl of the Remove. The MIGHT of the mite and BABYSIT brought a smile each.
    Solutions to Sunday’s posers: 1. AVE (NAVEM-n-m) , just like HI (SHIP-s-p) in English
    2. The best answer is a lady who has lost a foetus. She is a tomb which does not have the body. And she is a body who is not in a tomb.
    3. How much wood would a woodchuck chuck..... (Groundhog Day was the hint)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Needed a bit of googling today, what with words I had not heard of like CYBERNAUT and university names. Got totally lost on SCHMOES. Did not think of looking up a word starting with four consonants. I enjoyed the meal at Erode.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Many E and CD clues today.

    This is the first time I have seen a fill-in-the-blank clue in a cryptic crossword ! (8D)

    ReplyDelete
  4. With regards to the fill-in-the-blank clue, I'm sure Gridman must have wanted an underscore in between the words, while TH ended up rendering a hyphen, instead - a small aggravating condition needing proper punctuation.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Rumba romba nanna irukku, eppaDi ?

    ReplyDelete
  6. The blank has appeared like a hyphen in the online version. I was just beginning to feel bad about Erode's non-appearance in recent times, and Gridman did not disappoint me today!

    Also I remember having solved quite a few Nabob clues, mostly Gridman's, I suppose.

    ReplyDelete
  7. And number heard = FORE is fast becoming trite in THC these days...

    ReplyDelete
  8. Satya, Bhavan: In my first post I had assumed Gridman is using a subterfuge, but I think you are right, it is probably a TH printo. Maybe Gridman can clarify.

    ReplyDelete
  9. FOREthought :

    All setters live with this. Having to write a different clue for the same word repeatedly. In that sense they are similar to music composers required to create tunes for the same hackneyed situations.

    Fore being a 4 letter word probably doesn't offer too much flexibility.

    For + e
    F + ore
    ~Four
    {Fo(r)e}

    What else ?

    ReplyDelete
  10. Golfer's shout
    Forward deck without the rook

    ReplyDelete
  11. Bhavan

    I think your post at 8:51 covers far few options. The options increase manifold with the suffix word. Consider FOR{E TA ST}E or FO{RE THO}UGHT, for example.

    I agree there are words for which cluing options are limited, maybe NABOB is one such, but definitely not for prefixed words :)

    ReplyDelete
  12. By the way, what does the surface intend to mean?

    Wing, a number heard, doesn't begin to move up

    ReplyDelete
  13. Shyam, I was talking about FORE as a 4 lettered word(adj,n,adv). In a combining form it naturally has a much wider scope for clueing.

    The surface reading wasn't very satisfactory for me too. Wing ... doesn't begin to move up probably indicates a broken arm, but the whole thing I'm not sure.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Copy was perfect. But, alas, standards in journalism are declining, with subs not knowing the difference between a blank and a dash, between a hyphen and a dash, between an em dash and en dash and much else.
    The proof reading department, which was a check in earlier days, is non-existent in newspaper offices now.
    If you use the phrase 'needs must', it's most likely to be mauled.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Wing [of a bird perhaps] doesn't move up.
    A number [of persons] heard.
    Not great surface, anyway.

    ReplyDelete
  16. I think it'd make better sense if Wing is a name of Chinese guy or something. Wing, on hearing a number, stops to climb. Number could mean anything depending on the situation.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Gridman in all of his 600 crosswords has had NABOB(S) only three times:
    Rich persons walk off with old balance sheet (6)
    Catch senior citizen - a wealthy individual (5)
    Catch old boy, a rich man (5)

    ReplyDelete
  18. For NABOB this time, G has used a different tack.

    Try writing a clue for NABOB using a completely different wordplay.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Initially, not a big or bold prince

    ReplyDelete
  20. Rich man reportedly denied Robert (5)

    ReplyDelete
  21. CVasi Sir, Actually I very recently saw one of these clues in Shuchi's site. Perhaps I had the hangover!

    ReplyDelete
  22. Rich man earning new hot wealth could be at a low ebb

    ((AT A LOW EBB) - (H+N+ WEALTH))* = NABOB

    ReplyDelete
  23. Hi,
    1) 21D - Editor accepts honour to place a journalist with troops (5) - {E{MBE}D} --- can you help decipher this?
    2) Does Senior map to "OB"? What is the expansion for "OB"?

    ReplyDelete
  24. Governor Noah oddly takes a short cut (5)

    ReplyDelete
  25. Hi AVK
    1) MBE=Member of (the Order of) the British Empire
    EMBED=A journalist who is given an official placement within a military unit (also embedded reporter)

    2) OB=Old boy+Alumnus

    ReplyDelete
  26. Idle rich from Hyderabad refusing a London cop

    ReplyDelete
  27. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Rich man has a ball launched in good French retreat (5)

    ReplyDelete
  29. Slighty cheeky:

    Rich man with a property of 6.023 X 10^(23) shilling (5) :D

    ReplyDelete
  30. I had a doubt as to the definition part in 21A-"Editor accepts....".Looked up for Col.'s clarification,but could not find it.Now I take it that it is "place a journalist with troops".Am I right?

    ReplyDelete
  31. 4D-Erode with a capital D misled me for a while.I am wondering if it was meant that way.
    Enjoyed 28A & 17D.Also,Kishore's opening round.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Fore-alternative contained in Iron

    ReplyDelete
  33. Padmanabhan. You will find this meaning of EMBED in any standard dictionary.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Kabaabs is to kebabs as nawaabs is to ______ (6)
    Completion exclamation makes this man your uncle, after not available rich man (5)

    ReplyDelete
  35. North American President leaves mother while returning from Britain and becomes Governor (5)

    ReplyDelete
  36. The return of Toms cartoon character as a rich man (5)
    Non Keralites please excuse.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toms_(cartoonist)
    I am a fan of Bobanum Molliyum :)

    ReplyDelete
  37. Paddy
    You're right. EMBED in this crossword is a verb.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Indian satrap catches body odour smell out (5)
    Catches on double duty.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Governor of North Asia expelled lean explorer(who visited Calicut in 1498)from a place which is unknown (5)

    ReplyDelete
  40. 1) How do we get con in Considerate?
    2) Why is vote X in Oxbridge?

    ReplyDelete
  41. Ben,
    Study=con
    http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/con
    (second meaning)

    x is what you mark when you vote.

    ReplyDelete
  42. NABOB:

    A boy not unknown in New Brunswick - someone rich (5)

    Rich man's article about Black River (5)

    Name of a duck (rich guy's) (5)

    ReplyDelete
  43. What Navneeth wrote down as NAWAB (5)

    ReplyDelete

deepakgita@gmail.com