Puzzle at a Glance
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Puzzle Number in The Daily Telegraph
DT 27165 | |
Publication Date in The Daily Telegraph
Tuesday, April 30, 2013 | |
Setter
Unknown | |
Link to Full Review
Big Dave's Crossword Blog [DT 27165] | |
Big Dave's Review Written By
Deep Threat | |
BD Rating
| |
Difficulty - ★ | Enjoyment - ★★★ |
Falcon's Experience
┌────┬────┬────┬────┬────┬────┬────┐
███████████████████████████████████
└────┴────┴────┴────┴────┴────┴────┘
Legend:
█ - solved without assistance
█ - incorrect prior to use of puzzle solving tools
█ - solved with assistance from puzzle solving tools
█ - solved with aid of checking letters provided by puzzle solving tools
█ - unsolved or incorrect prior to visiting Big Dave's blog
█ - reviewed by Falcon for Big Dave's blog
| |
Notes
The National Post has skipped DT 27164 which was published in The Daily Telegraph on Monday, April 29, 2013. |
Introduction
Notes on Today's Puzzle
This commentary is intended to serve as a supplement to the review of this puzzle found at Big Dave's Crossword Blog, to which a link is provided in the table above.
Across
1a Heads of Daily Telegraph maintaining
weird stain's removed (7)
The Daily Telegraph[7] is a daily morning broadsheet newspaper, founded in 1855 as The Daily Telegraph and Courier, which is published in London and distributed throughout the United Kingdom and internationally. It also happens to be the source of this puzzle.
5a Company almost attempted to restrict
European exclusive circle (7)
9a Peaceful? Turning better if I start to
complain (7)
Deep Threat appears to have overlooked one element of the charade. The wordplay should be "A charade of a verb meaning ‘to better’ reversed (turning), IF (from the clue), [I (from the clue)] and the initial letter of C omplain.".
10a Let everyone be indebted to daughter (7)
11a Baby plants bit of dad's heather with
twigs around the outside (9)
Ling[5] is the common heather (Calluna vulgaris), a purple-flowered Eurasian heath that grows abundantly on moorland and heathland.
12a Hatred from goblin right away (5)
13a Gallery frames second choice (5)
The Tate Gallery[5] (commonly known simply as the Tate) is a national museum of art in London, England founded in 1897 by the sugar manufacturer Sir Henry Tate (1819 – 1899) to house his collection of modern British paintings, as a nucleus for a permanent national collection of modern art. It was renamed Tate Britain in 2000, when the new Tate Modern gallery opened.
15a Cops and Morse drunk, getting Brahms
and Liszt? (9)
Chief Inspector Endeavour Morse was the central character in the British detective drama television series, Inspector Morse[7]. The series, based on a series of novels by English crime writer Colin Dexter, ran for seven seasons from 1987 to 1993 (with 5 follow-on specials).
In British slang, Brahms and Liszt[5] means drunk (rhyming slang for 'pissed').
Johannes Brahms[5] (1833 – 1897) was a German composer and pianist. He eschewed programme music and opera and concentrated on traditional forms. He composed four symphonies, four concertos, chamber and piano music, choral works including the German Requiem (1857–68), and nearly 200 songs.
Franz Liszt[5] (1811 – 1886) was a Hungarian composer and pianist. He was a key figure in the romantic movement; many of his piano compositions combine lyricism with great technical complexity, while his twelve symphonic poems (1848–58) created a new musical form.
17a Disorderly Irish soldier (9)
19a Dead reserved (5)
22a Ready to follow the French language (5)
In French, the feminine singular form of the definite article is la[8].
Ready[5] (also readies or the ready) is British slang for available money or cash. Tin[5] is dated British slang for money ⇒
Kim’s only in it for the tin.
23a Some feel a Borat episode's complicated
and confusing (9)
Borat's Television Programme[7] is a two-part compilation spin-off of Da Ali G Show by British television station Channel 4. The show originally ran in 2004, predating by two years the subsequent movie Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan. The show features Borat Sagdiyev (played by English comedian Sacha Baron Cohen) in the United States learning about the local culture and customs, much in the vein of the later movie. The two episodes contain Borat and Brüno segments from Ali G in da USA, along with new and unseen interviews and shenanigans.
25a Ecstasy left me in hospital department
getting oxygen, say? (7)
E[5] is an abbreviation for the drug Ecstasy or a tablet of Ecstasy ⇒ (i)
people have died after taking E; (ii)
being busted with three Es can lead to stiff penalties.
One would almost suspect that the only functioning area of the Crosswordland Hospital is the ear, nose and throat (ENT[2]) department.
26a One runs about spilling gin -- it's a job for
the housekeeper? (7)
27a Meet, perhaps, without shaking fist (7)
28a Determined to get money and set off (7)
Down
1d Dose working with pet at first, before it's
put down (7)
2d Cusses terribly about Conservative
victory (7)
3d Permissible to remove large pants (5)
In Britain, pants[5] is an informal expression meaning rubbish or nonsense ⇒
he thought we were going to be absolute pants. Here, I believe that "be pants" (or "be rubbish") would be interpreted in the sense of 'perform poorly' — i.e., 'be awful'.
4d Specialist catch with line at sea (9)
5d Man's leggings (5)
To say that these leggings "sound sound like a synonym of Man’s" is perhaps to draw a very fine distinction — if one ignores the apostrophe, the two words are spelled identically.
6d Criminal who stalks -- they'll be seen on
television (4,5)
7d Farmer finally runs with it inside sheep
pen again (7)
8d Perennial Dawson maybe planted in
borders (7)
Les Dawson[7] (1934 – 1993) was an English comedian and writer remembered for his deadpan style, curmudgeonly persona and jokes about his mother-in-law and wife.
The wordplay — which, for some reason, poses a concern for Deep Threat — is LES (Dawson, maybe) contained in (planted in) ENDS (borders).
14d Plots in Greene's novel (9)
Graham Greene[5] (1904 – 1991) was an English novelist. The moral paradoxes he saw in his Roman Catholic faith underlie much of his work. Notable works: Brighton Rock (1938), The Power and the Glory (1940), and The Third Man (written as a screenplay, and filmed in 1949; novel 1950).
16d Soldier on ship eating fish spread (9)
The Royal Marines (RM)[5] is a British armed service (part of the Royal Navy) that was founded in 1664, and trained for service at sea, or on land under specific circumstances.
17d Tablet has no power with head ailment
(7)
Usually found in place names, ness[5] means a headland or promontory ⇒
Orford Ness.
18d Go back and give someone another
drink? (7)
20d Fancy Head of Intelligence cracked
Enigma (7)
An Enigma machine[7] was any of a family of related electro-mechanical rotor cipher machines used for the encryption and decryption of secret messages. Enigma was invented by the German engineer Arthur Scherbius at the end of World War I. The early models were used commercially from the early 1920s, and adopted by military and government services of several countries — most notably by Nazi Germany before and during World War II. Several different Enigma models were produced, but the German military models are the ones most commonly discussed.
21d What ships hold English in fear? (7)
23d Guard not opening mouth (5)
24d Old, grim smell (5)
Key to Reference Sources:Signing off for today — Falcon
[1] - The Chambers Dictionary, 11th Edition
[2] - Search Chambers - (Chambers 21st Century Dictionary)
[3] - TheFreeDictionary.com (American Heritage Dictionary)
[4] - TheFreeDictionary.com (Collins English Dictionary)
[5] - Oxford Dictionaries (Oxford Dictionary of English)
[6] - Oxford Dictionaries (Oxford American Dictionary)
[7] - Wikipedia
[8] - Reverso Online Dictionary (Collins French-English Dictionary)
[9] - Infoplease (Random House Unabridged Dictionary)
[10] - CollinsDictionary.com (Collins English Dictionary)
[11] - TheFreeDictionary.com (Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary)
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