DT 31220 – Big Dave's Crossword Blog
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DT 31220

Daily Telegraph Cryptic No 31220
Hints and Tips by Deansleigh

+ – + – + – + – + – + – + – +

BD Rating – Difficulty **/***  Enjoyment ***

Good morning everyone, and welcome to the midweek back-pager blog.  For me, this was the hardest solve of the week so far.  It took me a while to get the three long anagrams 1a, 1d and 8d, but once I’d cracked these everything else fell into place.  I liked the cricketing misdirection in 17a and the dull French group in 3a, but my favourite today was the pachydermal pothead in 28a.  There is also an excellent Quickie pun.  Many thanks to our setter.

In the hints below the definition element of each clue has been underlined, anagrams are CAPITALISED and indicator words (e.g. anagram indicators) are in brackets. The answers are concealed under the Click Here buttons.

Across Clues 

1a Roman Loren – I’m crazy about Italy’s last superstar (7,6)
MARILYN MONROE: An anagram (crazy) of ROMAN LOREN IM is placed around the last letter of ItalY.

9a Emollient Conservative, seasoned elite (4,5)
COLD CREAM: The single-letter abbreviation for Conservative is followed by a synonym of ‘seasoned’ (in the sense of well-established or experienced) and a word that can mean the best or choicest part.

10a To me, Gazza embodies the ultimate character (5)
OMEGA: The first three words in the clue form a lurker which hides (embodies) the last letter in the Greek alphabet.

11a Wager gold that’s rolled is fit for a king? (5)
ROYAL: A word that can mean to place a bet is followed by the word for gold in heraldry, and then the whole thing is reversed (rolled).

12a Cheerful air of retired Illinois subaltern (4)
LILT: The abbreviation for the state of Illinois is reversed (retired) and followed by the abbreviation for lieutenant (subaltern).

13a My base heart! (4)
CORE: A synonym for ‘My!’, i.e. an interjection expressing surprise, is followed by the symbol for the natural logarithm base in mathematics.

15a Without travel permit finally visited Serbian city (4,3)
NOVI SAD: When split (2, 4) the first six letters can refer to the absence of a permit to enter a country.  This is followed by the last letter (finally) of ‘visited’, giving the name of Serbia’s second-largest city, on the banks of the Danube.

17a Wide area for bowling, both ends of Lancashire crease (7)
WRINKLE: The cricketing abbreviation for a wide is followed by a word that can mean a portion of a bowling green, and the first and last letters (both ends) of ‘Lancashire’.  The answer is a synonym of ‘crease’ completely unconnected to cricket.

18a Fish wraps in this place stuck together (7)
COHERED: A popular white fish is placed around (wraps) a synonym of ‘in this place’.

20a Left English drunkard husband last seen in Cairo (somewhere in Africa) (7)
LESOTHO: The abbreviations for Left and English are followed by a word for a drunkard, the abbreviation for husband, and the final letter (last seen) of ‘Cairo’.

21a Madame returned Yankee TV award (4)
EMMY: The French abbreviation for Madame is reversed (returned) and followed by the letter represented by Yankee in the NATO phonetic alphabet.

22a Scot’s opposed to fine being docked from pickpocket gang leader (4)
AGIN: The abbreviation for fine is removed from the name of the leader of a gang of pickpockets in Dickens’ Oliver Twist, giving us a Scots dialect word for ‘opposed to’.

23a Ring that chap found in church (5)
CHIME: A synonym of ‘that chap’ is found inside the abbreviation for the Church of England.

26a Soldier in Salvation Army who’s working over Christmas (5)
SANTA: A word for an insect of which ‘soldier’ is an example is placed inside the abbreviation for the Salvation Army.

27a Allegedly, this compiler traduces a Nordic citizen (9)
ICELANDER: Here we are looking for a homophone (allegedly) of how our setter might say that he or she traduces, verbally maligns or defames somebody.

28a Plant that helped Dumbo to get high? (8,5)
ELEPHANT GRASS: A cryptic definition.  This plant, native to the African savannah, could be a description of a pachydermal narcotic.

Down Clues

1d Ah … ice cream: one’s naughty lunchtime dish (8,6)
MACARONI CHEESE: An anagram (naughty) of AH ICE CREAM ONES.  I probably wouldn’t have this for breakfast, but I don’t think it’s solely a lunchtime dish.

2d Recover everybody stuck in railway (5)
RALLY: A synonym of ‘everybody’ is placed inside (stuck in) the abbreviation for railway.

3d The French group sounded dull (10)
LACKLUSTRE: The French feminine singular definite article is followed by a homophone (sounded) of a six-letter word meaning a group or bunch.

4d Irritated, required to be injected with last of phial (7)
NEEDLED: A synonym of ‘required’ contains, or is ‘injected with’ the last letter of ‘phial’.

5d Shmo breaking rule that deals with Resistance (4,3)
OHMS LAW: An anagram (breaking) of SHMO is followed by a word for a rule established by authority.

6d Fleece man on board (4)
ROOK: This word meaning to charge exorbitantly is also the name of a piece on a chessboard.

7d Watches unlimited hockey on top of terrace where pupil sits (3,6)
EYE SOCKET: A synonym of ‘watches’ and the internal letters (unlimited) of ‘hockey’ are placed before the first letter (on top of, in a down clue) of ‘terrace’.  The pupil here has nothing to do with school.

8d Geese afraid, pot boiling, this the result? (4,2,4,4)
PATE DE FOIE GRAS: This French delicacy is an anagram (boiling) of GEESE AFRAID POT.

14d Scottish rock, R&B singer David after new alias (5,5)
AILSA CRAIG: The first name of a Southampton-born singer-songwriter follows an anagram (new) of ALIAS.  This Scottish island in the Firth of Clyde is the source of the granite used to make curling stones for the Winter Olympic Games.

16d Brave he-men certain to maintain forcefulness (9)
VEHEMENCE: A lurker, hidden in the first three words of the clue.

19d Small shark – could it be curling? (7)
DOGFISH: This type of small shark is known to curl into a doughnut shape when threatened. (Additionally, of course, as Madflower and Graham Powell have pointed out, the first part of the answer is a cur and the second part could be a ling!  Thanks to you both.)

20d Partners of Dec and Eric carrying large light (7)
LANTERN: The abbreviations of the names of the partners of Declan Donnelly and Eric Morecambe are placed after (carrying, in a down clue) the abbreviation for ‘large’.

24d Country home admiral regularly vacated (5)
INDIA: The two-letter word that can mean ‘(at) home’ is followed by the alternate letters (regularly vacated) of ‘admiral’.

25d Horse runs into Ms West (4)
MARE: The abbreviation for ‘runs’ in cricket is inserted into the first name of a famous American actress.

Which clues did you like best?  Let us know in the comments below.

The Quick Crossword pun: OWED + ECHO + LOAN = EAU DE COLOGNE

52 comments on “DT 31220
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  1. For a Wednesday this was fairly gentle with smooth surfaces throughout. I had to wait for the checkers in order to decipher the 4 outside long’uns, but then easily gettable with 8d LOI. My pody places are the Serbian city (13a), the pupil holder (7d) and COTD the fearful geese (8d).
    My thanks to the setter and Deansleigh.
    1*/3.5*

  2. Quite tricky I thought. I needed Deansleigh to understand fully the solutions to 13a 26a and 27a. The excellent anagram in 8d was my favourite although 22a was great as well. I took a while to spot the lurker in 16d which was well hidden to me for some reason I know not. Thanks to our setter.

  3. Fairly straightforward for a Wednesday with the only curve ball being 15a which was fairly clued but needed e-confirmation, not being au fait with Serbian cities. My podium comprises 14d, 16d and the high jumbo at 28a. Thanks to compiler and Deansleigh.

  4. A splendid crossword at a perfect level for me, with good mix of clue difficulties: enough straightforward ones for a way in, but plenty that required some thought as well. Highlights included Gazza getting praised at 10a (deservedly so, with everything he does for this site), the Scot opposing in 22a, and the alleged traducing in 27a. Thank you to the setter.

    And this puzzle is a great example of how general knowledge can be used in crosswords but clued in such away that the answers are gettable even by the generally ignorant: ‘subaltern’ in 12a, the 15a Serbian city, the 17a bowling area, and 6d as a verb with that meaning were all new to me.

    13a was my last in: there are lots of expressions which can be used like ‘my’ and those crossing letters didn’t really help. Thank you to Deansleigh for explaining the curling in 19d. And you’re right: that Quickie pun is excellent.

  5. A cracking Tuesday evening with The Sky Blues sealing the championship followed by very enjoyable start to today with a puzzle filled with some excellent clues.

    Not for the first time my only hesitation came in the form of two tiddlers – 6d, the obvious answer in my mind being Hess, then realised I was on the wrong ‘board’ and 13a where the checkers gave me two possibilities, I opted for the double definition but worried about the use of “my”, I’ve Deansleigh to thank for explaining the correct parse.

    Having lived for a year just outside Glasgow where occasionally I would not understand what was being said 22a made me smile.

    My two COTD are 19d which, after waiting for the penny to drop, I thought very clever and 17a for its misdirection.

    Thanks to the setter and Deansleigh

    1. I’ve just realised that I parsed 19d somewhat differently….cur = dog and ling = fish. I hope that makes sense.

  6. A very enjoyable puzzle. I had to confirm the Serbian city.
    Not knowing of 19a’s propensity to curl up I got to the answer by splitting curling to be a dog then a fish.

    Top picks for me were 19d, 20a, 3d, and 26a.

    Thanks to Deansleigh and the setter.

  7. What a lovely friendly Wednesday crossword – it didn’t take long to solve but was most enjoyable while it lasted.

    I did like the Gazza clue and I parsed 19d in the same way as Graham @5

    Thanks to our setter and Deansleigh.

  8. Really good. COTD is la cluster in 3d ! The quickie is also great, a lot packed into such a short one.

    Thanks to all concerned.

  9. The answers I didn’t know were so fairly clued that it was straightforward to arrive at the result , 15 across being one such. Just chewy enough and a delight. Top of the clues was 3 down.
    I have dissected 3 small sharks for zoology at school and the curling posture never came up so the second route in worked for me for the solve.
    Thank you Deansleigh and pat on the back for today’s setter

  10. This was good fun and a quick full. 20 and 21 across and 8 down are my top picks with 8d being my COTD. Many thanks to the setter and hinter.

  11. As Conor says, this was good fun, not really a Wednesday puzzle at all – 1.5*/4.5*

    Candidates for favourite – 10a, 27a, 3d, and 25d – and the winner is 3d.

    Thanks to whomsoever and Deansleigh.

  12. I thought I had already left a comment but it doesn’t seem to have been published so apologies if this becomes a duplicate.
    I enjoyed this challenge but it was a DNF as 14D was outside of my general knowledge. I did think a more precise definition for the second word would have been fairer as the number of singers called Dave is infinite. Thanks to Deansleigh and the setter for the fun though.
    With respect to my ongoing challenge with the Thai language, by far the biggest challenge is the tonal nature of the Thai language. In effect what that means is that any word spelt the same way can be pronounced in 5 different ways. High tone, middle, tone, low tone, rising and falling. Although the letters are the same the tone will determine the meaning. So a word which sounds to the western ear as the name for a bovine animal,”cow”, can have 5 different meanings. Cow, cow, cow cow, cow, can translate to news, white, rice, knee, mountain.
    Wish me luck

  13. A gentle and enjoyable solve with some nice clues. I didn’t know the Bosnian city , but it was a straightforward parse and I did feel pleased to have got it right. I spent a good few minutes on 8d my last one in. Thanks to the setter and Deansleigh.

  14. 8d is brilliant! Struggled with it until the penny dropped, and smiled in awe. Not the hardest of crosswords but very satisfying to complete.

  15. This was great fun and perfect for a Wednesday.

    I love a bit of new knowledge and this had plenty. I’ll remember the name of the Balkan city as losing a tennis match makes ‘**** ***’ (Novak Djokovic who is a Serb or should that be Serv)

    I didn’t know the bowling term nor the pachydermal pothead (great alliteration, D!)

    ‘Cur ling’ is a great spot by the solvers above. I had to look up shmo and, sure enough, it’s a shortened version of the most excellent word ‘schmuck’ though the first c has dor some reason been dropped.

    My pody picks are the outstanding 1a, 3d and 8d.

    MTT…..hmm….Hudson (?) and Nigel Hades.

    2*/5*

  16. I enjoyed that very much – a good level of challenge and amusement without being irritatingly obscure or impenetrable. Even the anagrams had super smooth surfaces. I particularly liked Dumbo’s relaxant at 28a and 14d reminded me of trips to Galloway, which may well be my favourite area of the UK (I concede that I might have struggled with it otherwise, despite having spent many pub hours making a case for the R&B singer concerned being at the root of all evil in the world). Thanks very much to the setter and to Deansleigh. Now to finalise my plan to see Paul Simon in Liverpool in a couple of weeks. Art Garfunkel announcing a gig in Watford has made me want to see both of them while they’re still around.

    1. Never seen either of them live Chris unfortunately. My only concern with Paul would be that his voice isn’t what it was.
      A great 2nd half last night – wish I’d been there.

      1. I had the great pleasure of seeing them at the Royal Albert Hall in 1967. I was absolutely blown away with how good they were and I can still remember the concert vividly.

      2. Indeed, definitely a case of going with limited expectations. They’re both 84 now and have had to adjust accordingly. I was unusually excited though when I saw that Artie was playing down the road. And yes, a great result after a few weeks of stumbling towards the line. I haven’t been for years and having kids grow up within earshot of Vicarage Road led to season tickets and conflicted loyalties. Very poor, I know.

  17. A good, solid puzzle which was definitely at the easy end of the week-week offerings. I went to school with a girl called Ailsa Craig, but didn’t twig why she had the name until decades later! */***

  18. 1.5*/4*. This was good fun, mostly not too challenging with a handful of clues needing teasing out.

    19d was my last one to parse simply because we have always been led to believe that Telegraph crossword editorial policy is not to allow “lift and separate” clues without indicating the separation. As Prolixic often comments in Rookie Corner when a setter has used one of these devices, “some editors will not allow lift and separate”. Until today that was the case with Telegraph puzzles! I should add that I don’t object to them at all, and this one was a very clever example. But “rules are rules”!

    Many thanks to the setter and to Deansleigh.

    1. Would the use of “could it” and the question mark not be sufficient to indicate something unusual is afoot? I completely failed to parse that one – so I have no skin in the game – but I’m curious as to how ‘the rules’ can be bent or otherwise circumvented.

    2. Ahoy there RD…
      Regarding the clue for 19D, I would argue that since the clue simply uses synonyms for both (3,4) parts of a 7-letter word to give another (3,4) 7-letter word then there isn’t any lifting, and the separation is no different to what one might expect to find in any Lego-type CD. I’d be a liar if I said I was 100% confident that the ed would blow white smoke but I think it’s fine (well he would say that etc).
      Best wishes, Mandy Rice-Hudson

  19. An excellent puzzle – thanks to our setter and Deansleigh.
    I liked 20a, 3d, 19d and the Quickie pun but my favourite (for obvious reasons) has to be 10a.

  20. This was perfect for a busy and sunny Wednesday, entertaining and full of terrific clues. The Quickie pun also gets my vote alongside the excellent 3d.

    My thanks to our midweek setter and Deansleigh.

  21. 1.5* / 3.5* Just right for a midweek puzzle, with 2 or 3 needing google confirmation.
    Favourites today include the Nordic citizen at 27a, where pupil sits at 7d and the Scottish rock at 14d
    Thanks to Deansleigh and compiler
    ps Also liked the quickie pun

  22. Compleatly faiped to spot the parsing of 19d and had a question mark next to it – thanks to those more observant setters who spotted it and made me aware. For that reason I award it my clue of the day. Thanks to the setter and to Deansleigh for blogging duties

  23. As expected this Wednesday puzzle is a step up in difficulty from the beginning of the week puzzles. A few clues I found the parsing hard to fathom, but overall the puzzle was gettable in the long run.

    2.5*/3.5*

    Favourites include 1a, 18a, 23a, 5d & 7d — with winner 5d
    Smiles for 28a, 7d & 25d

    Thanks to setter & Deansleigh

  24. * / ****
    Really enjoyed this and flew through it pretty quickly for a Wednesday. I can feel a fall coming! Ticks went to the 27a Nordic citizen, the 16d Brave he-men and of course the superb 8d!!

    Also liked the call out to Gazza but couldn’t get the footballer out of my head.

    Needed some parsing confirmations but a great puzzle all round.

    Many thanks to the setter and She Aligned

    May not be able to comment tomorrow as on a business trip to Ashton-u-Lyne please wish for the trains to be running tomorrow so I don’t get a repeat of last week’s 4.5hr journey home from Manchester (1hr 9mins it should have been)!

  25. The paper didn’t arrive at the shop this morning but the suppliers said it would arrive fairly soon. By two o’clock this afternoon it was obvious there would be no paper so I turned to the DT puzzles site. Oh, how I hate solving on a laptop! Consequently, what with work to do, I have just finished.

    Great puzzle with lots of dropping metal discs and smiles. I will go along with others and nominate the high elephant although I initially tried to put in a type of begonia.

    Thank you, setter for a fun puzzle, which I finished with a beer rather than a coffee. Thank you, Slain Hedge for the hints.

  26. Very enjoyable with so many excellent clues but I have to have 8d as my favourite closely followed by 19d. I did need to check the Serbian city, the Scottish rock and the parsing of 17a.

    Many thanks to Hudson for the fun and to Deansleigh for the hints

  27. Great mid-week puzzle though I had to resort to help for 15a as not familiar with the area. 17a made me pause as I detest anything to do with cricket, football or rugby. I enjoyed all the long outside clues. COTD 28a. Many thanks to the setter and Deansleigh. Good pun re the Quickie!

  28. Not the quickest of solves at 9am this morning but then it was never going to be as I was trying to input the answers on a mobile phone & scroll to the next clue with the one hand whilst having a venesection & reading the clues out to the phlebotomist. As ever another thoroughly enjoyable Hudson production with a plethora of ticks – the1a&d anagrams leapt out but the excellent 8d needed all checkers in before the penny dropped & it was my fav until the pachydermal pothead (love it) zonked out along the bottom. Other particular likes – 9,17&26a plus 3,14&19d.
    Thanks to H & Deansleigh

  29. Perfectly straightforward until it wasn’t, I even knew the rock. Needed the hints to parse 3d and 19d and although I worked out from the clue what I thought 15a must be I looked it up without confidence and was amazed that it was correct, who’d have thought that! A candidate for the list in my book. I rarely award cotd to an anagram but 8d is so good it had to be, there were other candidates. Thanks to the setter and DL.

  30. I agree with Taylor … sauntered through 20 or so clues over breakfast, then faltered greatly, especially in the SE.

    LOI was 19D – based on the CUR-LING parse (which I missed), it’s landed itself on the podium! Also 14D’s rock, another latecomer and a new landmark for me, and 8D for a novel anagram, solution plus I like the food 😬

    Big thanks to the setter for a spiky Wednesday challenge, and to Deansleigh.

  31. For once , I solved this fairly quickly(well by my standards) most of it whilst eating a bowl of cornflakes . With anagrams, I start by writing the letters in random order, in a circle and invariably the answer jumps out. I had only written a couple of letters for 1a ,before I saw the superstar. 1d fell into place quickly afterwards. Linda H.

      1. When I tell people that I’ve been doing the same crossword for over fifty years, they invariably ask if it’s that difficult.
        Enjoy your reunion lunch, Steve ! I celebrated my diamond jubilee reunion at my old college last year. As a student, I just did the DT quick crossword, but became seriously involved with the cryptic in 1967,since a senior work colleague did it in the staff room during break times. I remember her saying she had once found a particular crossword almost impossible, until she realised it was April 1st and all the answers fitted in backwards.

  32. Won’t be around tomorrow. I’m meeting uni friends at The Bell in Tillington, Herefordshire for lunch.
    Play nice! 😊

  33. Only started this evening. A more challenging solve than the previous couple of days and not quite a full solve. Totally misdirected by 6d, the chess piece never crossed my mind and in incorrect spelling for the place in Africa. Struggled initially with 1a and 1d and needed a few checking letters before they fell into place.
    Favourites today were the undocumented traveller in Serbia at 15a and the two Scottish references at 22a and 14d.
    Thanks to the setter and to Deansleigh for the hints.

  34. Highly entertaining, managed most of it unaided . Enjoyed the long anagrams at 1a , 1d, 8d – the latter reminding me of somewhat bizarre shop signs of happy looking geese when holidaying the Dordogne! Favourite clue the traduced Nordic in 27a. Thanks to setter and Deansleigh for hints

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