Financial Times 16,535 by AARDVARK

An enjoyable puzzle as always from Aardvark. Thank you.

It looks like there is at least one pangram in here, anybody fancy the job of counting the letters? I had a quadruple pagram to blog last week from Gozo. Once one starts then they are all at it…

image of grid
ACROSS
1 COPECK Without training, company clerk drained money abroad (6)
PE (physical exercise, training) inside (without…is…) CO (company) ClerK (no middle letters, drained)
4 SQUEAKED Trembled outside close to collapse after son confessed (8)
QUAKED (trembled) contains (outside) collapsE (last letter, close to) all following S (son)
9 AZORES Unknown soldiers in ocean around archipelago (6)
Z (an unknown) OR (other ranks, soldiers) inside SEA (ocean) reversed (around)
10 VINEGARY Wine from France and Spain Lineker found acidic (8)
VIN (wine, from France) and E (Espana, Spain) then GARY (Gary Lineker perhaps)
12 MOSQUITO Bloodsucker doctor’s given somewhere in Ecuador (8)
MO’S (doctor is) with QUITO (somewhere in Ecuador)
13 BREEZE Piece of cake causing wind (6)
double definition
15 NEAT Variable number Hoover up and tidy (4)
N ( a variable number) and EAT (hoover up)
16 GRIPE WATER Medicine for child having a temperature put in jug with clasp (5,5)
A T (temperature) inside EWER (jug) all following (with) GRIP (clasp)
19 INTRUSIONS Roger probes dodgy unionist’s repeated meddling (10)
R (Roger, phonetic alphabet radio communication perhaps?) inside (probes) anagram (dodgy) of UNIONIST’S
20 MUSK Minute Welsh flower, ingredient in perfumery (4)
M (minute) then USK (the River Usk, something that flows in Wales)
23 OSSIFY Whenever controlled by faceless authoritarian, become rigid (6)
IF (whenever) inside (controlled by) bOSSY (authoritarian) missing first letter (faceless)
25 VERBOTEN Catch alumnus and churchman heading west – it’s forbidden (8)
NET (catch) OB (old boy, alumnus) and REV (churchman) all reversed (heading west, right-to-left on a map)
27 ILLINOIS Midwest region’s hostile current endlessly loud (8)
ILL (hostile) I (current, electricity symbol) NOISe (loud, endlessly)
28 DELUXE Top-quality light unit clogging British river (6)
LUX (unit of illuminance) inside (clogging) DEE (the River Dee)
29 APOPLEXY Raging father covered in beer by Yankee (8)
POP (father) inside ALE (beer) X (by, times) Y (Yankee, phonetic alphabet)
30 STODGY Dense, sticky hot dogs regularly occupying enclosure (6)
every other letter (regularly) of hOt DoGs inside STY (enclosure)
DOWN
1 CHAPMAN Tea minister’s taken with an itinerant dealer (7)
CHA (tea) PM (Prime Minister) with AN
2 PROP SHAFT Support mum behind part of engine (4,5)
PROP (support) SH (mum, silence) AFT (behind) – something attached to an engine?
3 CHEQUE Type of payment Argentinian put down, dropping two pounds (6)
CHE (Che Guevara, a famous Argentinian) then QUELL (put down) missing (dropping) L L (pound, twice)
5 QUIZ 22 reckoned to be here in Scrabble competition (4)
the letter-tiles Q (10) U (1) I (1) and Z (10) added up (reckoned) make 22 in Scrabble
6 EYEBROWS You’re probably surprised when they go up (8)
cryptic definition
7 KNAVE Jack in obstructive van kindly reversed (5)
found reversed inside obstructivE VAN Kindly
8 DAYWEAR Throwing away red pyjamas, say? Unlikely (7)
anagram (throwing) of WAY RED – not so unlikely in the Covid 19 era!
11 STARLIT Sparkling young film actress, one representing East (7)
STARLeT (young film actress) with I (one) replacing E (east)
14 SPANDEX Special toilet roll makers avoiding right material (7)
SP (special) then ANDrEX (toilet roll maker) missing R (right)
17 TRUST FUND Store of money discovered not old – after time, corroding (5,4)
FoUND (discovered) missing O (old) following T (time) RUST (corroding)
18 CUP FINAL Charlie delighted playing Alf in match (3,5)
C (Charlie, phonetic alphabet) UP (delighted) then anagram (playing) of ALF IN
19 IWO JIMA Single woman mostly maintains journal on one WW2 battle (3,4)
I (one,single) WOMAn (woman, mostly) contains J (journal) on I (one)
21 KENNEDY President understanding newsman in US city (7)
KEN (understanding) then ED (newsman) inside NY (US city)
22 ABJECT Wretched article needs new start (6)
OBJECT (article) with a different starting letter
24 SALVO Five left when flipping football burst (5)
V (five) L (left) AS (when) all reversed (flipping) then O (looks like a football)
26 JINX Juliet admitted kiss cast ill-fated spell (4)
J (Juliet, phonetic alphabet) IN (admitted) then X (a kiss)

18 comments on “Financial Times 16,535 by AARDVARK”

  1. I counted them (again). This time it’s a triple pangram. Superbly constructed with beautifully cryptic clueing and without recourse to unusual words. Brilliant!

  2. Thanks, PeeDee.

    This was ok apart from
    Roger = R (it’s Romeo in the International Phonetic Alphabet),
    A prop shaft isn’t part of a engine, it is part of the transmission,
    and football = o (!!)

  3. On a side note, I first came across that meaning for Chapman through “whil that the Chapman sleeps” in Chaucer’s prologue. This brought a few smirks from my class mates since that is my surname.

  4. Suspecting a triple pangram two thirds of the way through saved the day, helping me to finish in the NE corner where I had hit the wall. Likewise, MUSK, which I could only visualise as ‘leek’ for a long time, being artfully deceived by flower. Some very clever surfaces. Really enjoyed KNAVE and VINEGARY. Yes, Gary Lineker, who, with a Leicester connection promoted Walkers’ salt and vinegar flavoured crisps, aka ‘salt and lineker’, geddit?). Thanks to Aardwark – very rewarding – and to PeeDee for filling in gaps I was too lazy to find in the parsing!

  5. @2 So it is Grumpy.  Might Roger=R be an abbreviation is radio communication?  I can’t spot it in Chambers.

  6. Not sure where R for Roger can be found, other than in today’s Brummie crossword. Surely two different setters can’t both be wrong?

  7. Collins has this in the derivation for Roger: C20: conventional name of international signal flag for R

  8. …and a second derivation for a different entry for Roger C20: from the name Roger, representing R for received

  9. Thanks Aardvark and PeeDee

    Roger = R is also from the comms alphabet used by the RAF before the international one was adopted.

    A minor point, but I think the abbreviated ‘loud’ in Illinois is noisy, not noise.

  10. Hi Mark, most verbs can be made into a noun by adding -ing.  Walking is healthy.  Giving is a good thing.  Corroding is a common problem.

  11. Quite hard, I thought, and was away to a very slow start. But of my 1st 5 in, 3 contained Xs & so one naturally thinks, ‘Oh, hullo’ and that helped tremendously.
    Thereafter, everything that Hovis says @1.
    Great puzzle, thanks to both.

  12. Very enjoyable, and a (triple) pangram to boot – what more could one want?

    We got off to a flying start after spotting 5dn in a quick glance through the clues and, being Scrabble players, immediately thought of QUIZ.  We weren’t sure what ‘here’ signifies in the clue, though – we wondered if it referred to placing those tiles in the corresponding position on the Scrabble board, but in that case the score would be 23, since the I would be on a double letter square.

    We did have a minor issue with ‘corroding’ in 17dn.  As PeeDee says, adding -ing to a verb can make it into a noun, which is fine for, say, walk, where there is a difference in meaning between ‘a walk’ and ‘walking’ but for ‘corrode’ using ‘corroding’ as a noun sounds very awkward and there is a pefectly good noun in ‘corrosion’ anyway – leave ‘corroding’ as a present participle or an adjective.  But as we say, it’s a minor point in an excellent crossword.

    Thanks, Aardvark and PeeDee.

     

  13. Hats off to Aardvark for the triple pangram but, alas, I could not finish this crossword because CHAPMAN, GRIPE WATER, and ANDEX as a toilet roll maker are all foreign to me. Thanks PeeDee for the much needed explanations.

  14. Thanks Aardvark and PeeDee

    Over the hour to get this one done across four sittings throughout the day.  Became highly problematic that there was a pangram of sorts going on quite early in the piece, but didn’t pay too much attention to it during the grid fill after that – was only post solve that I counted up the triple pangram – a great effort.

    Thought that the Scrabble clue at 5d was cute.  Also liked the clever NEAT at 15a.

    The centre connector clues in this grid pattern can be quite difficult … and so it was here.   That is where I finished after finally recalling GRIPE WATER as the baby tummy medicine, which then let the clever STARTLIT fall and still a good bit of work to find SPANDEX (and Google the unknown British toilet roll brand) to finish it off.

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