It’s Phiday again!
We always look forward to blogging Phi’s Friday offerings, but unfortunately we didn’t enjoy this one as much as we had hoped. We can’t quite put a finger on the reason for a slight sense of disappointment – maybe it was because we solved it fairly quickly! It is a well-crafted puzzle, but just didn’t seem to offer a feeling of satisfaction when completed. There’s slight sense of deja vu in 1ac if you completed Dac’s puzzle on Wednesday!
As far as we can see, there is no theme or Nina to tie the puzzle together. Perhaps we’re missing something – it certainly wouldn’t be the first time!
Across | ||
1 | Makes pet of mammal occupying pens behind London building | |
DOMESTICATES | CAT (mammal) in or ‘occupying’ STIES (pens) behind DOME (London building) | |
9 | Crime skill incompletely acquired by native | |
ARSON | AR |
|
11 | Surround most of union in drink | |
BELEAGUER | LEAGU |
|
12 | United abandoning defender recalled as an obstacle | |
DRAG | G |
|
13/22 | Old North American concealed heavyweight round object, without hope of success | |
ON A HIDING TO NOTHING | O (old) + NA (North American) + HIDING (concealed) + TON (heavyweight) + O (round) + THING (object) | |
15 | Spooner’s fish and cabbage – and where it’s eaten? | |
CAKE HOLE | A Spoonerism of HAKE (fish) COLE (cabbage) | |
16 | Consequence of idleness I see in a peasant | |
RUSTIC | RUST (consequence of idleness) + I + C (see) | |
19 | Decorate outside of lavatory with spots | |
PIMPLY | PIMP (decorate) + L |
|
20 | US soldier securing free run on his football field | |
GRIDIRON | GI (US soldier) around or ‘securing’ RID (free) + R (run) + ON. The ‘his’ is needed to indicate it’s American. | |
22 | See 13 | |
See 13 | ||
23 | Provoke sudden speed, cutting time | |
SPUR | SPUR |
|
25 | Saint’s condemnation? Act of war | |
SHELLFIRE | S (saint) + HELLFIRE (condemnation) | |
26 | Actor heading off for bed | |
LAYER | ||
27 | Ace shanties spread around a marine area | |
EAST CHINA SEA | Anagram of ACE SHANTIES (anagrind is ‘spread’) around A | |
Down | ||
2 | What you get from pen? Love what you have in pen | |
OINK | O (love) + INK (what you put in pen) | |
3 | Involves doctor in Queen’s paintings | |
EMBROILS | MB (doctor) in ER (Queen) + OILS (paintings) | |
4 | Hard to avoid the first selling-point? | |
TELE-AD | T |
|
5 | Mammal, dim, treated with caution | |
COATI-MUNDI | Anagram of DIM and CAUTION – anagrind is ‘treated’ | |
6 | Sporting prize inevitably won by the visiting team? | |
TOURIST TROPHY | Cryptic definition – a play on the fact that the visiting team in many international sporting series are sometimes referred to as ‘tourists’ | |
7 | Youngster’s special equipment | |
SPRIG | SP (special) + RIG (equipment) | |
8 | First couple of hindrances better seen as obstacle | |
HANDICAP | H AND I (first two letters of ‘hindrances’) + CAP (better) | |
10 | Nurse’s bedside approaches displaying greed | |
SHARK’S MANNERS | SHARK’S (nurse’s – a type of shark) + MANNERS (approaches, as in ‘bedside manners’) | |
14 | Setter’s most recent use of tongue, mostly regarding stamps | |
PHILATELIC | PHI (setter) + LATE (most recent) + LIC |
|
17 | Colleague to study without paying? That’s about right | |
CONFRERE | CON (study) + FREE (without paying) round or ‘about’ R (right) | |
18 | Irish town doctor had ego dented? | |
DROGHEDA | DR (doctor) + an anagram of HAD EGO (anagrind is ‘dented’) | |
21 | Family in Book 2 revealing clothing | |
BIKINI | KIN (family) in B (book) II (two) | |
22 | Sample constitution has misplaced society | |
TASTE | STATE (constitution) with the S (society) moved or ‘misplaced’ | |
24 | Picked up end of line: universal large size | |
GLUE | E (last letter or ‘end’ of line) + U (universal) + LG (large) | |
I raced through most of this puzzle but I was held up at the end by SHARK’S MANNERS. The expression was new to me, post-solve I found that it isn’t in my edition of Chambers or any of the online dictionaries that OneLook searches through, and it took a while before I remembered the nurse shark. The clue for TELE-AD had also held me up briefly. The clue for CAKE HOLE made me smile and brought back memories of my mother being horrified when I used the expression as a child.
I can’t see a nina or a theme either, with the same caveat as Bert and Joyce.
SHARK’S MANNERS is in Chambers but is shown under MANNERS. The unusual grid esp top row and some unusual answers make me suspect a theme.
I wasn’t quite as disappointed as you both; I thought this was a sound puzzle, which I enjoyed. While a beautifully prepared and presented Sole Meunière every day would be a gustatory delight, the occasional plate of Doigts de Poisson can also please …
Like Andy, I struggled with my final two answers: SHARK’S MANNERS and TELE-AD. OINK was simple, but good.
Thanks to B&J and to Phi.
Smacked with the hubris stick today after yesterday’s romp. My excuse is that I didn’t know sharks had manners. I thought they just charged 4000% interest, take it or leave it.
Thanks to Phi and bloggers.
nmsindy@2 – so it is, although it makes it harder to fathom why none of the online sources has it.
Did most of this on a train this afternoon. Guessed SHARK’S MANNERS from the word play; I had never heard the term. There were still four answers that I needed electronic aids for to get once I got to my hotel room.
No theme in this one – other than allowing ON A HIDING TO NOTHING to sit there symmetrically. I was a little surprised to see Dac’s puzzle knowing that this was scheduled for today.
SHARK’S MANNERS went in because I was vaguely aware of it, and the idiomatic use seemed obvious – but it seems only Chambers has it, so might not have been the best choice.
It looks as though this page may make Phi responsible for increasing the number of occurrences of “shark’s manners” known to Google from zero to seven (and counting) … I wonder if this is the first time a setter has used an answer that doesn’t occur (in the sense used) anywhere on the WWW? One better than a Googlewhack?
Well, of course I had to go and Google it after lurchio’s comment…
I got 190 rather than 7. Of the top ten, seven were dictionaries (including an Anglo-Bengali), one was this page, one was a fifteensquared blog on an Azed puzzle, and one was almost entirely in Japsnese (no, hang on – dict.cn, it’s a Chinese dictionary, make that eight dictionaries). So perhaps not a phrase with much currency – yet I doubt anyone would mistake its meaning if they did come across it.
Mea culpa! My search omitted the apostrophe, so drew a blank (but mysteriously did turn up “sharks’ manners”, albeit in other contexts). Phi is quite right, the usage is obvious enough, and like other solvers I was led to the answer by the word play – I was just intrigued that a phrase in common enough currency to appear in a crossword (and in my edition of Chambers, had I not been too lazy to get up and look) had apparently so little presence on the web.