Independent 10,561 / Crosophile

Crosophile has compiled this week’s Tuesday puzzle. As we all know, there tends to be something going on, some kind of theme, in the Tuesday puzzles – what will it be today, one wonders?

A quick perusal of the clues suggests that any theme is centred on 3, with its references to six other clues. Crosophile has cleverly carved up 3 into two halves, the first of which can be clued in three ways, and the second of which provides a category of which three examples are given. I rather enjoyed this somewhat quirky construct, once I realised what was happening.

My favourite clues today were 1, for both surface-reading and originality; and 17, for both surface and (to me at least) unexpected definition. I needed Chambers to make sense of the draughts reference at 7. I hope that I have parsed the “b” correctly at 5D.

*(…) indicates an anagram; definitions are italicised; // separates definitions in multiple-definition clues

Across    
     
01 DE-ICED Decide to have two couples twist – that’s dispelled frostiness

“to have two couples” means that two pairs of letters in “decide” swap round, i.e. <de>CI<de> becomes “ic” and <deci>DE becomes “id”!; a de-iced windscreen is no longer frosty

     
05 BALL GAME Non-white group embracing, totally, golf and tennis perhaps

[ALL (=totally) + G (=golf, in radio telecommunications)] in BAME (=non-white group, i.e. Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic, in UK demographics)

     
06 STRUGGLE Mat somehow gets left outside in combat

RUG (=mat) in *(GETS + L (=left)); “somehow” is anagram indicator

     
10 STIGMA Greek character taking time to make special mark

T (=time) in SIGMA (=Greek character, i.e. letter of Greek alphabet)

     
11 MEET Deal with swarm returning

TEEM (=swarm (with), abound (with)); “returning” indicates reversal

     
12 EARWIGGING Lecture is encouraging on war I roughly intervened

*(WAR I) in EGGING (=encouraging on); “roughly” is anagram indicator; an earwigging is a scolding, telling-off

     
13 REPRESENT Create a picture of about here

RE (=about, regarding) + PRESENT (=here, in attendance)

     
15 AFOOT In the wind at back of boat with clutch of eggs

O O (=clutch of eggs, i.e. pictorially) in AFT (=at back of boat)

     
16 ADDER In board game, a possible way down when way up’s a non-starter

<l>ADDER (=way up); “is a non-starter” means first letter is dropped; the reference is to the board game snakes – hence “adder” – and ladders

     
18 SHOWPIECE Fine example of how species endlessly evolved

*(HOW + SPECIE<s>); “endlessly” means last letter is dropped from anagram, indicated by “evolved”

     
22 WORSHIPPER Maybe destroyer’s love for adult and for every person who loves

W<O (=love, i.e. zero score) for A (=adult)>RSHIP (=maybe destroyer) + PER (=for every)

     
24 ACRE Some ground needing bit of aftercare in retreat

Hidden (“bit of”) and reversed (“in retreat”) in “aftERCAre”

     
25 HEARSE Transport making final journey to catch Southeastern

HEAR (=catch, e.g. a comment) + SE (=southeastern)

     
26 INTRUDER Perhaps burglar’s unskilled breaking into short opening passage

RUDE (=unskilled, uncultured) in INTR<o> (=opening passage, of e.g. piece of music; “short” means last letter is dropped

     
27 SEASCAPE Shilling amateur put in to get free painting

S (=shilling, as in LSD) + [A (=amateur) in ESCAPE (=get free)]

     
28 PUFFED Fed up with following when running out of breath

*(FED UP + F (=following)); “when running” is anagram indicator

     
Down    
     
02 EXTREME Kill-or-cure? – then dies from the next remedies

When “then” and “dies” are removed from “the next remedies”, what is left is “extreme”, which might describe a “kill-or-cure” treatment

     
03 COUNTER-MEASURES Antidotes from 11,16 or 19 and 4, 15 and 24

COUNTER (=meet, entry at 11; adder, i.e. one counting, entry at 16; or worktop, entry at 19) + MEASURES (=degrees, entry at 4; a foot, entry at 15; and acre, entry at 24)

     
04 DEGREES Qualifications of reactionary Rees-Mogg’s faction set in stone

ERG (=Rees-Mogg’s faction, i.e. European Research Group) in SEED (=stone, e.g. in peach); “reactionary” indicates reversal

     
05 BLEAR Bloody tragic king’s watery-eyed

B (=bloody, when abbreviated as an expletive in text) + LEAR (=tragic king, from Shakespeare)

     
06 LASSIE Maid of Perth’s a fool caught in a falsehood

ASS (=a fool) in LIE (=a falsehood); lassie is a Scottish expression for “girl”, hence “Maid of Perth”

     
07 GOING OFF IN A HUFF Sulky reaction from 3 for a lapse on board?

A huff is a “counter measure (=entry at 3)” in draughts whereby a piece is removed from the board for failing to make a possible capture

     
08 MEMENTO Note about hospital department is something to remember

ENT (=hospital department, i.e. Ear, Nose and Throat) in MEMO (=note, i.e. memorandum)

     
14 NTH Some anthems not defined in ordinal

Hidden (“some”) in “aNTHems”; “nth” refers to an unspecified item in a series

     
17 DIOCESE Before start of encryption there’s scrambled codes, I see

*(CODES I) + E<ncryption> (“start of” means first letter only); “scrambled” is anagram indicator

     
19 WORKTOP Surface from Notts town moving from one end of street to the other

WORKSOP (=Notts town): “moving from one end of street to the other” means letter “s” becomes “t”

     
20 CORTEGE Get held up in main procession with 25

TEG (GET; “held up” indicates reversal) in CORE (=main, as in core business); a cortege is a procession with hearse (=entry at 25)

     
21 CINEMA Alien was seen here and came in after mutating

*(CAME IN); “after mutating” is anagram indicator; the reference is to the series of Alien sci-fi films, begun in 1979

     
23 PRIDE Finally stop travel to see some lions?

<sto>P (“finally” means last letter only) + RIDE (=travel, as verb)

     

 

7 comments on “Independent 10,561 / Crosophile”

  1. DNF as failed to answer 15A, having stupidly put ‘going out in a huff’. Also had to come here for explanations of half a dozen others, and failed to work out the themes, so not one of my best performances.  My excuse is lack of practice over the last week or so for ‘technical reasons’.  Thanks anyway to Crosophile and RatkojaRiku.

  2. This took some getting to grips with, but we eventually got it all after figuring out how 3dn interacted with the clues it referenced, although we couldn’t make the connection to 7dn which we got from the definition, enumeration and a few crossing letters – we’d never heard the term ‘huff’ applied to that move in draughts.

    We liked 5ac for its use of a topical acronym, but favourite was 1ac for its ingenuity.

    Thanks, Crosophile and RatkojaRiku.

  3. A bit of a struggle but I got there in the end, and even got most of the theme sorted.  Couldn’t parse 4dn having totally forgotten ERG.

    I’d guessed the second half of 3dn but couldn’t see the first word.  I had to go somewhere and as I was climbing the stairs, the first half suddenly came to me.

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