All gave some, some gave all... |
Take a look at this clue from the weekend’s Globe and Mail cryptic by Fraser Simpson.
31a Secretly carry off Scotch tenor SPIRIT
Too much of a good thing? I suspect some solvers would think so. As I parse that clue, I get three definitions, not two:
- Secretly carry off
- Scotch
- tenor
By the Ximenean book, that’s not cricket. A definition, wordplay (in this case a second definition), and nothing else. Another definition qualifies as “something else.” But having both “Scotch” and “tenor” in it makes the clue read better—a little more mysteriously too.
Then Hot and Trazom did something similar in this week’s The Nation puzzle: see 18d (in red) below. The second definition in the clue was more like a definition and a half. Was that intended? Did the constructors accidentally leave in part of their original clue while editing it? Maybe Hot will shed some light on this one for us.
Solution to The Nation cryptic crossword 3,327
Link to puzzle: http://www.thenation.com/article/179943/puzzle-no-3327
Degree of difficulty (by standards of this weekly puzzle): hard.
Political content: 8d.
Legend: “*” anagram; “~” sounds like; “<“ letters
reversed; “( )” letters inserted; “_” or lower case: letters deleted; “†”
explicit in the clue, “^” first or last letter or letters, “{” relocated letter
or letters; “§” heteronym, “¶” letter bank
Across
1a
|
A (BRA)HAM
|
BRA (“supporter”) contained in (“enthralled by”) A (†)
+ HAM (“bad actor”)
|
5a
|
*LAWSUIT
|
*TULSA WI (anagram indicated by “that can’t be right”)
|
9a
|
<_ON AIR_<
|
<wagne_RIAN O_pera< (hidden phrase indicated by
“part of,” reversal indicated by “retrospective”)
|
10a
|
}S{AN MARINO
|
{D}AN MARINO (“quarterback,” replacement of D
(“daughter”) with S (“son”) indicated by “replaced by”)
Easy example once you see it, but many solvers will
probably be misdirected into thinking of a country singer.
|
11a
|
THE THREE TENORS
|
¶HORNETS (letter bank indicated by “arrangement of …
involving repetition”)
|
13a
|
LEG U ME
|
LEG (“segment”) + U (“in text you”) + ME (†)
|
14a
|
NORM ANDY
|
NORM + ANDY (“two men”)
|
17a
|
ROCK STAR
|
*ARTS (inverted clue: ARTS is an anagram (indicated by
“rock”) of STAR)
|
19a
|
S TRAIT
|
S (“small”) + TRAIT (“feature”)
|
22a
|
CLAUS TROP(HOB_)IC
|
CLAUS (“Santa”) + TROPIC (“Capricorn perhaps”)
containing (“nabs”) HOB_o_ (“tramp,” omission of last letter indicated by
“mostly”)
|
25a
|
<OC<TILLION
|
<CO<TILLION (“dance,” reversal of first two
letters indicated by “head couple changes places”)
|
26a
|
GU(TS)Y
|
GUY (“man”) containing (“kidnaps”) TS (“Eliot”)
|
27a
|
~KARAOKE
|
~CARRIE (“Underwood of American Idol”) + OKIE (“an
Oklahoma native”), homophone indicated by “is heard”
|
28a
|
MA(*TURE)D
|
MAD (“angry”) containing (“about”) *TRUE (anagram
indicated by “disaster”)
Another good misdirection: I first thought disaster
was the definition rather than an indicator.
|
Down
1d
|
<AVON<
|
<NOVA< (“PBS program,” reversal indicated by
“rewound”)
|
2d
|
R *OAD HOG
|
ca^R^ (last letter indicated by “rear”) + *OH GOD A
(anagram indicated by “totaled”)
|
3d
|
HARD TIMES
|
Pun (hard copy of the New York Times)
|
4d
|
MIS_ER Y
|
MIS_t_ER (omission of T indicated by “loses time”)+
darc^Y^ (last letter indicated by “ultimately”)
Unusual definition had me looking for something
starting with CO at first.
|
5d
|
LANCE LOT
|
LOT (“fate”) following (“to carry”) LANCE (“a weapon”)
|
6d
|
W HALE
|
^W^ork (first letter indicated by “at first”) + HALE
(“well”)
|
7d
|
UN I CORN
|
UN (“one French”) + I (“one Roman”) + CORN (“cereal”)
An example of Hot and Trazom being strict Ximeneans:
the clue might have read more elegantly with an additional word, but a clue
should consist of a definition, wordplay, and nothing else.
|
8d
|
TROTS K(Y)ITE
|
TROTS (“moves briskly”) + KITE (“to pass a bad check”)
containing (“around”) Y (“a club”)
|
12d
|
ALAR(M C)LOCK
|
ALAR (“with wings”) + LOCK (“hair”) containing (“captivating”)
MC (“host”)
Clever definition
|
15d
|
METH OUGHT
|
METH (“speed”) + OUGHT (“a moral obligation”)
|
16d
|
~PAIRWISE
|
~PEAR (“fruit”) + WHYS (“reasons”) , homophone
indicated by “stated aloud”)
|
18d
|
COASTER
|
Double definition.
More like two and a half definitions: “tabletop
protector,” “waterfront resident,” and “resident going downhill”
|
20d
|
AV *IATOR
|
AV (“audio-visual”) + *A TRIO (anagram indicated by
“remix”)
|
21d
|
E(PONY)M
|
EM (“long dash”) containing (“straddling”) PONY (“a
horse”)
|
23d
|
_SAL VO_
|
propo_SAL VO_dka (hidden word indicated by
“penetrating”)
|
24d
|
~DYED
|
~DIED (“went out of use,” homophone indicated by “in
conversation”)
|
18D: your explanation is exactly how we intended it. So we're not strict Ximeneans after all! :) Once in a while, we enjoy breaching the firewall between def and wordplay, or as in this case, between one def and another. Plus, this is a nod to our predecessor, who did this sort of thing a lot.
ReplyDeleteI love 3+ defs and/or wordplay, clueing and solving. It's more fair than Ximenean, not less, because it gives you a third route to the answer.
ReplyDeleteI did raise my eyebrow at this clue though because it used resident twice. That's non-X for sure. I'd have preferred they finished off the third one properly and removed the ? such as:
A margarita pad for a beach bum, someone going downhill