Preamble: To compensate for the loss of half of the clues, the editor has inserted (in an appropriate order) an extra letter in each of the remaining clues (most of which didn’t make much sense). One clued answer is a seldom used variant spelling given in Collins.
Yay, first puzzle of 2015 (and my first blog of 2015) and it’s Schadenfreude!
Now, let’s see, we’re missing half the clues so we’re expected to fill in the blanks of unclued answers. Down to the business of solving the clues that we have. 14a falls straight away which is normally an omen. The extra letter is Q, which surely means that the second letter will be U but there are no U’s in 15a. 20a falls fairly soon after giving an L so I wonder if we’re looking for something like Q IS L… something to do with James Bond maybe – I believe there’s a Bond character called Q, is he Bond’s boss or something? I know next to nothing about James Bond.
A few more solves later, 21d falls giving us the first letter of 35a as X. The only answer that springs to mind is XRAY and I can see that 33a is potentially ECHO. A brief look at the top line and I can see QUEBEC as a potential answer. Looks like we’re looking for the NATO phonetic alphabet in some random order. Putting some pressure on 15a it capitulated and revealed a J. Aha, so 6a is going to be JULIET … hang on, it doesn’t fit, maybe it’s the variant spelling from Collins but, no, it can’t be because that sentence refers to a clued answer.
At this stage, the penny was thinking of dropping but clearly wasn’t quite ready. Looking at 13a it clearly wanted to be GRAM and G is an accepted abbreviation for GRAM so it’s not NATO after all, it’s just single letter abbreviations in Chambers – the penny has dropped.
There are exactly 26 clues and exactly 26 unclued answers. The order of the extra letters matches the order of the first letters of unclued answers. I wondered if this was going to lead to ambiguity of some answers but in true Schadenfreude fashion, I believe, all loose ends are tied up and there’s no ambiguity.
The answer that is in Collins is 3d BAGDAD and my only gripe with the puzzle is that I think that the clue for 4d should state terrapin (singular) rather than plural.
Otherwise a nice gentle start to the year, one of Schadenfreude’s easier puzzles – thanks very much.
Across | |||||
No. | Clue | Entry | Extra letter | Where used | Wordplay |
1 | Unclued | QUEBEC | |||
6 | Unclued | JUSTICE | |||
13 | Unclued | GRAM | |||
14 | Man with no IQ ruptured a membrane |
AMNION | Q |
1a | MAN NO I (anag: ruptured) |
15 | Jon replaces Victor and Elizabeth in every song |
ELEGY | J |
6a | LEG (on) replaces Victor and ER (Elizabeth Regina) in EverY |
17 | Coign [COIN] initially discovered in earthy clay |
BODLE | G |
13a | Discovered (initially) inside BOLE (earthy clay) |
19 | Unclued | LEFT | |||
20 | Crushed grain about to be eaten by calves |
GROATS | L |
19a | About inside GROTS (caves) |
22 | Lines are penned by shire layabout |
LOLLARD | H |
23a | LL (lines)+Are inside LORD (sire) |
23 | Unclued | HARD | |||
24 | Unclued | VERB | |||
26 | Give wayward son protection |
EGIS | V |
24a | GIE (anag: wayward)+Son |
27 | Unclued | TENSE | |||
30 | Unclued | ROMEO | |||
33 | Unclued | ECHO | |||
35 | Unclued | XRAY | |||
37 | The unknown language |
MANX | T |
27a | MAN (he)+X (unknown) |
38 | Osric ran off like a great actor |
ROSCIAN | R |
30a | OSRIC AN (anag: off) |
40 | Prime [PRIM] Minister finally is trapped by foreign spy |
PRISSY | E |
33a | ministeR (finally)+IS inside SPY (anag: foreign) |
41 | Unclued | FINE | |||
44 | Unclued | NAIRA | |||
45 | Narrow passage concealing ox, one of MacDonald’s cattle |
KYLOE | X |
35a | KYLE (narrow passage) containing O |
46 | Irish girl definitely not free before November |
NOREEN | F |
41a | NO (definitely not)+REE+November |
47 | Unclued | KAON | |||
48 | Doorkeeper went back into very large yard |
OSTIARY | N |
44a | RAIT (wet; rev: back) inside OS (outsize; very large)+Yard |
49 | Unclued | YANKEE |
Down | |||||
No. | Clue | Entry | Extra letter | Where used | Wordplay |
2 | Ill-natured guy knew about inductance |
UGLY | K |
47a | GUY (anag: new) containing L (impedance) |
3 | Father is south of pokey city on the Tigris |
BAGDAD (this is the one seldom used variant spelling given in Collins) |
Y |
49a | BAG (poke)+DAD (father) |
4 | Emu’s devouring 150 terrapins |
EMYS (surely the definition should be TERRAPIN – singular; plural is EMYDES) |
U |
7d | Y (150) inside EMS |
5 | Cities [CITES] entirely in constant sun |
CALLS | I |
9d | ALL (entirely) inside Constant+Sun |
7 | Unclued | UNIFORM | |||
8 | Cat let loose after ordinary drive |
TOOTLE | C |
10d | TO (at)+Ordinary+LET (anag: loose) |
9 | Unclued | INDIA | |||
10 | Unclued | CALORIE | |||
11 | Chaps extremely dolorous following the end of Julie Walters [ALTERS] |
EMENDS | W |
12d | juliE (end of)+MEN (chaps)+DolorouS (extremely) |
12 | Unclued | WEIGHT | |||
16 | Unclued | DEAL | |||
18 | Unclued | BORN | |||
21 | Popular group tenor supported by driver and former partner |
T REX (1970s pop group) |
D |
16d | Tenor+River+EX (former partner) |
25 | Branch initially exposed by bright American relative |
BRER | B |
18d | BRanch+Exposed (initially)+Right |
28 | Interaction diagrams come out before spam is broadcast |
ECOMAPS | M |
31d | COME (anag: out)+SPA (anag: broadcast) |
29 | Doorkeeper taking in good film extract |
TRAILER | O |
32d | TILER (doorkeeper) containing RA (god) |
31 | Unclued | MASS | |||
32 | Unclued | OXYGEN | |||
33 | Earth around old candied root |
ERINGO | A |
36d | Earth+RING (round)+Old |
34 | Dusty [DUTY] fellow leaves Corfiot in a mess |
OCTROI | S |
39d | CORfOIT (minus Fellow; anag: in a mess) |
36 | Unclued | ANNO | |||
37 | Many pin up at least ten men |
MINYAN | P |
40d | MANY IN (anag: up) |
39 | Unclued | SAINT | |||
40 | Unclued | PENNY | |||
42 | Horse-drawn carriage accommodating two kings in eastern zone |
EKKA | Z |
42d | Eastern+A (one) containing KK (two kings) |
43 | Unclued | ZONE |
AN easyish puzzle but a truly stunning grid!
Nowhere near as fearsome as a first glance at the preamble might suggest. Quite good fun, and a good grid & blog.
Ken, regarding 4d: if you treat Emys as the genus (rather than a member of it), then I think “terrapins” (plural) is OK – we’ve had that sort of cluing before.
PS Note to Ed.: if you’re going to colour cells, please can you use a paler shade – I can hardly read my pencilled answers.
Much the similar experience and approach to this one as kenmac. The clues started to fall fairly readily, with across 14, 26, 37, 38, 40 and 41 being the first to reveal themselves along with 2, 3, 11, 21 and 34 down.
The 26/26 structure had also been deduced, and again much like kenmac the J was the route in to realising it wasn’t all NATO phonetic related.
An easier workout than usual from Schadenfreude and thanks to kenmac for the blog and impressive animation
Re HG @ 2. Just curious. Do many people still pencil in answers? I have a bog standard printer that does photocopies, so I always run off a few copies of puzzle.
Apart from anything else, this allows me to take risks with entries, then go to a clean copy when it turns out I was on the wrong track.
jonsurdy@4
Still ? I have had to stock up on pencils and ask for a pencil sharpener for Christmas solely for Inquisitor/Listener purposes !
Many thanks to Schadenfreude for a relatively gentle start to the year with as crosswordy a crossword as I could hope for. Lovely stuff.
jonsurdy @4 (& BF @5): that seems a dreadful waste of paper. I am an academic by trade, and my research tools are simple – a blank sheet, a pencil, an eraser. (And, of course, something to think with.) My crossword tools are largely the same.
BF: I have a marvellous rOtring mechanical pencil – yes it cost £25 back in 1997 but it’s been worth every penny. So the only time I need a sharpener is when my coloured pencils become too blunt. (Set of 12, Christmas present to self a couple of years back, solely for crossword highlighting purposes.)
I would find that hard work, pecilling and rubbing out – especially on thin newsprint.
But yes, very crosswordy crossword, and enjoyable blog.
I am a writer by trade and I prefer to work pen to paper when playing with ideas. This often results in an enormous waste of paper before I get anywhere near getting down something I like. That is very like the PDM.
In recent years I have learned to work direct to screen, but it’s not really the same. You can’t cover the table with sheets of A4 that are full of crossings out and little notes. So, sometimes I go back to the old way.
And Rotring – marvellous products.
Mea culpa.
Pencilling, not pecilling.
I don’t know if this is the right place to discuss this, but I am interested in how other people approach solving – their techniques etc.
For me, working on two grids can often help me see which is the right garden path to go up. This was particularly important in the famous/infamous ‘Soprano puzzle’.More generally, cartes blanche and any puzzle involving letter clashes. Is this unsporting?
Like others, I found this not too taxing once the penny dropped that it wasn’t all phonetic alphabet related. For some reason, maybe having visited the country a few years ago and the use of the N for Naira solution, I put Tenge (the Kazakh currency) down for the T at first. I actually don’t know if the symbol for Tenge is T or not.
Re solving, I tend to be a bit gung-ho with pen and the paper and usually end up doing lots of overwrites and crossing out. I’ve not bothered sending in an entry in for some time so don’t worry too much about appearance of the final grid, as long as it’s legible to me.
Many thanks to Schadenfreude and Kenmac.
jonsurdy@10
I try and cold solve much of any puzzle as I can before thinking about the grid.
I generally just use the newspaper and a separate sheet of paper for jotting down extra/missing letters and any random ideas that I might have about the theme during the solve. Occasionally I will make a copy of the grid if it looks like a lot of grid manipulation will be required. The only exceptions are carte blanche puzzles. I used to write the answers vertically and horizontally on strips of paper and experiment with sticking them into the grid however after an unfortunate long-haired cat/warm blu tack incident Mrs BF suggested using Excel or similar as an alternative.
HG@6 I haven’t owned a mechanical pencil for years, but now that you mention it I may well invest in some rOtring products.
Bert hates using pencils when solving crosswords. When we do resort to using one, when it is obvious that alterations have to be made, a good quality mechanical pencil is definitely the best.
We have only sent the odd completed grid in so, like Rob H there are often over writes as there were in this one.
An interesting idea for a puzzle and one which we enjoyed – we don’t think we have ever been disappointed by Schadenfreude.
Thanks to S&B.
My approach is very much the same as jonsurdy@4, though I am occasionally brave and just “go for it”. Usually with terrible consequences.
Kenmac, apologies for going so off-topic here.
I am going to start a thread on message board for anyone who might be interested in continuing conversation.
Love to hear strange adventures of BF @12.
Very enjoyable puzzle…although I couldn’t quite solve the bottom right hand corner. Thanks to Schadenfreude, and Kenmac for clearing it up.
I actually finished this one, and found it really enjoyable. Many thanks, Schadenfreude!