Wednesday, 10 January 2018

Globe and Mail Cryptic 20180110

Wednesday January 10, 2018

Difficulty: medium-easy



Skipping obvious ones; definitions underlined.

Across

22. Drinks and a sandwich
Round [double def]: A round of drinks. Also, mostly British usage for the slices of bread used to make a sandwich (I think).

25. His bank account is often misleading
Angler [cryptic]: Not so sure about this one... an angler can be a schemer or scammer, so he's likely not to keep proper accounts?


Down

1. Make an offer for a boat
Tender [double def]: a tender can be a small service boat, or a dinghy attached to a yacht.

14. Utterly pompous
Orotund [cryptic]: I suppose the "utterly" part means spoken, and orotund means a pompous or bombastic style of speech. I like the quote at the Online Etymology Dictionary:
The odd thing about the word is that its only currency, at least in its non-technical sense, is among those who should most abhor it, the people of sufficient education to realize its bad formation; it is at once a monstrosity in its form & a pedantry in its use. [Fowler]


Globe and Mail Cryptic 20180109

Tuesday January 9, 2018

Difficulty: medium-hard

DNF. Missed 8A, 5D, 18D



Skipping obvious ones; definitions underlined.

Across

8. Inventor's fate is to produce one thing after another!
Train of events [anagram]: I'm not too familiar with this phrase. And I missed the anagram.

11. A household word in France
Menage [cryptic]: menage mean household in French

19. A word of questionable value
Interrogative [cryptic]: Had interrogation for this, which threw me off for 18D

21. They should be allowed to be themselves, we're told
Bygones [cryptic]: Missed it, but I like it. Let bygones be bygones.

Down

18. Unused grounds
Dregs [double def?]: This was not clear to me. I guess dregs can mean remnants (unused?), but to me it's not usual to call (coffee) grounds "dregs", unless it might mean the bits left in the bottom of a poured cup of coffee.

Tuesday, 9 January 2018

Globe and Mail Cryptic 20180108

Monday January 08, 2018

Difficulty: hard

Several tough ones for me I didn't get: 23A, 26A, 21D, 22D. Guessed, but had to look up 9A and 27A.



Skipping obvious ones; definitions underlined.

Across

1. Many fish are found in shallow water
Shoal [double def]: A shoal is a shallow area in water like a sandbar. It is also a name for a school of fish.

9. Game brings Harry and mother together
Halma [charade]: I was not familiar with this game.












23. They blow, as a tornado does apparently
Winds [cryptic]: I couldn't get this one. Winds blow and torandos wind (twist).

26. A lofty approach, of course
Chip shot [cryptic]: I should have got this one. I had the "o" from a cross, and I was thinking "iron", so I was on the right track, recognizing "course" = gold course.

27. Do impressive work as a huntsman?
Chase [cryptic]: Guessed "chase". Apparently it can also mean "to ornament (metal) by engraving or embossing."


Down

14. Satanic food in which there's no good
Devilish [cryptic]: I get the satanic part, but not sure what the rest means. What food has no good? Devilfish?

21. He seems to be against splitting the profit
Gavin [charade]: against (v = versus) splitting (within) profit (gain)

22. Give a rise to one in the army
Hoist [charade]: one (i) in the army (host)

Thursday, 4 January 2018

Globe and Mail Cryptic 20100104

Thursday January 04, 2018

Difficulty: medium-hard

Trouble in north-west corner: couldn't get detached, touches, or cables-length



Skipping obvious ones; definitions underlined.

Across

1. Separated, being indifferent
Detached [double def]: I had divorced first. Got it once I figured out the cross from "touches".

5. Standard feature of Saturn or Mars
Norm [hidden word]

17. They help people grow better
Green fingers [cryptic]: Here of course they're called "green thumbs".


Down

2. Appeals emotionally for a loan
Touches [cryptic/double def?]: For some reason I couldn't come up with "touches" for (asking for) loans. I have read enough Wodehouse to be very familiar with the term. But I guess I don't use it myself, so it didn't occur to me.

3. Measure how many words in a telegram?
Cables length [double def]: A "cable's length" is a nautical measure (720ft US or 608ft UK). I didn't remember a telegram was called a cable. I knew it, but don't use it (like "touch" above). Telegrams are before my time.



Wednesday, 3 January 2018

Globe and Mail Cryptic 20100103

Wednesday January 03, 2018

Difficulty: medium



Skipping obvious ones; definitions underlined.

Across

20. Take cover
Insure [cryptic?]: Wasn't certain about this answer. To cover is to insure perhaps. But to take isn't to insure as far as I can see, and "take cover" doesn't sound like a definition for insure either. Maybe take coverage? Am I missing something?


Down

3. Republic is setting up a king
Israel [charade]: is + rael (king Lear backwards)

4. Naughty nun's feat is to unzip!
Unfasten [anagram]: I thought this one was funny :) Naughty nuns unzipping! Maybe I just have a puerile sense of humour.

5. Wild capers may get you into one
Scrape [cryptic]: I was wondering how capers could get you into a scrape, but then I figured out it's not what you put on smoked salmon, but "capers" as in pranks or robberies.

6. Sad boy seen when a vessel is about to leave
Blue Peter [double def]: Never heard of a Blue Peter. Maybe Brits are more familiar with it due to the long running kid's TV show. It's a nautical symbol/flag that means the ship is ready to sail.






14. Somehow ends Red China
Dresden [anagram]: I have never heard of Dresden china, but it seems to be the oldest and maybe most famous in Europe, also called Meissen porcelain.



Tuesday, 2 January 2018

Globe and Mail Cryptic 20100102

Tuesday January 02, 2018

Difficulty: Hard


North-west corner stymied me. Had to resort to google to finish.


Skipping obvious ones; definitions underlined.

Across

7. A love outwardly secure
Nail [charade]: "A" with love ("nil") around it (outwardly)

8. International shipping line
Plimsoll [cryptic]: A Plimsoll line (or waterline) are lines on the sides of ships to indicate safe load levels. I didn't know this (or likely have forgotten it).

10. Superficially he maintains our ways
Road mender [cryptic]: I guessed this, but wasn't very convinced. Maybe more of a British term.

12. Fishermen use many spinners
Creels [charade]: C (many; C = 100) + reels (spinners). Is "use" part of the definition? Creels are wicker baskets for holding fish, not fishermen themselves as far as I know. But "fishermen use" sounds like an incomplete definition to me.



Down

3. One way of underlining a decision
Ruling [double def.]: I had trouble getting this one until I got the "L" from Plimsoll.

4. A sober habit
Temperance [cryptic]: I had abstinence first, which threw things off a bit (not to mention misspelling it with an "A").

5. Cry from a small boat
Ahoy [double-def]: I had "yawl" here first, which seemed to fit pretty well (yawl is a British variant of yowl). A "hoy" is another kind of small boat: "a small sloop-rigged coasting ship."

6. Kissed perhaps - the usual start between girl and boy
Saluted [charade]: Sal (girl's name) + u (start of "usual") + ted (boy's name). Saluted meaning kissed seems a bit tenuous to me.