The official bored-at-work cryptic crossword pass it on thread.

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Races around a dictator (6)
Ceasar

Think this should be 'races madly around...', fwiw. Otherwise either the anagram isn't indicated, or 'around' is doing double service.

ledge, Tuesday, 13 January 2009 18:15 (seventeen years ago)

Yeah, that's better.

ilx chilton (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 13 January 2009 18:22 (seventeen years ago)

Also, it's spelled Caesar :-)

Am part of the way there to ledge's, but not enough to actually get an answer...

ailsa, Tuesday, 13 January 2009 20:44 (seventeen years ago)

complicit

ilx chilton (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 13 January 2009 20:52 (seventeen years ago)

yup

ledge, Tuesday, 13 January 2009 20:53 (seventeen years ago)

Well done. I'd got comp, but was trying to work in "let" for "allowed" which was throwing me a bit.

ailsa, Tuesday, 13 January 2009 20:54 (seventeen years ago)

Yes, I kept trying to get "let" in there too.

ilx chilton (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 13 January 2009 20:55 (seventeen years ago)

Ha, I thought it might be something to do with 'licit' straight away, but couldn't get the 'comp', kept on trying to go with 'CEO' or similar... feel a bit dumb for not automatically thinking licit -> complicit.

emil.y, Tuesday, 13 January 2009 21:00 (seventeen years ago)

Nobody's gonna try this one?

Kind of engine school gets an earful (6)
--a---

ilx chilton (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 13 January 2009 21:06 (seventeen years ago)

I think I know how it works but can't think of any words to fit.

ledge, Tuesday, 13 January 2009 21:28 (seventeen years ago)

I managed to cheat my way into the answer, so I won't give it here, but I'm pleased I was on the right track with one of the parts.

emil.y, Tuesday, 13 January 2009 21:42 (seventeen years ago)

King of the mouth getting me a lesson (8)

lemmy tristano (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 16 January 2009 02:17 (seventeen years ago)

Tutorial

Francisco Javier Sánchez Brot (onimo), Friday, 16 January 2009 11:05 (seventeen years ago)

Kind of engine school gets an earful (6)
--a---

search

"Two Ears" Laybelle (Noodle Vague), Friday, 16 January 2009 11:06 (seventeen years ago)

ugh (at self)

ledge, Friday, 16 January 2009 11:25 (seventeen years ago)

I'm still a novice at cryptics...
I was doing one today where the clue was "County dressing informally" (4 letters)
I was sure it would be 'Down' as in County Down, dressing down=informally.
The correct answer was mayo.
I see why but is there a reason why 'down' wouldn't work?

Not the real Village People, Saturday, 17 January 2009 00:43 (seventeen years ago)

If we are being purist, it wouldn't work because "down" =/= "dressing informally". I wouldn't be surprised at it actually occurring though, maybe with a question mark at the end to indicate a less stringent cryptic. (NB I am not an A+ expert at this.)

(Another thing is that the surface of that clue isn't all that, imo -- counties rarely dress.)

anatol_merklich, Saturday, 17 January 2009 15:36 (seventeen years ago)

get on with a dash and a shout (6)

ledge, Saturday, 17 January 2009 17:34 (seventeen years ago)

OK, I hope I don't derail the thread by this, but I really am inordinately pleased with myself for having made my first full 15x15, and would like to share.

NB I'm a beginner at this, so some of the clues may of course be a bit off, at least if you're a hardcore Ximenean or similar. In fact, I know that a couple are really pushing it, and probably outside what's deemed acceptable... ;)

http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b356/olem/cryptic_crossword01.gif

Across
1. Disturbed niece hid son from Vietnam, possibly (11)
9. Monster returns, consequently (4)
10. Wave of popular sentiment is reason to run (11)
11. Deflated, essentially (4)
14. Some heard rumbling membrane (7)
16. Force of about 50,000 "Fat Men" (7)
17. Travels to finish "Peru for Dummies" (5)
18. Was sorry for rude disturbance (4)
19. Second-rate gear for two-master (4)
20. They're in command of their faculties (5)
22. Possible source of biofuel – no diesel around (7)
23. Percussion instrument with broken amp in it (7)
24. The smallest heirloom? (4)
28. Latin boy twisting a citron from a Caribbean island (6, 5)
29. The fifth letter from the right margin ruler (4)
30. You smooth more than half of the small, small parts (11)

Down
2. Single-minded enthusiast rendered half crazy (4)
3. Burden is carried by you and me (4)
4. Cover skin in front of public (7)
5. Amphibian that is both east and west in a part of the Bible (4)
6. Sausages fought over in 480 BC? (7)
7. Working class is in favour of permit allowing song after opening time (11)
8. My French translation of Genet, first rushed in from the Balkans somewhere (11)
12. Drinking-glasses gone next morning? (4, 7)
13. I charge after fresh soil from an Arctic island (11)
15. Motorcycle was blue (5)
16. Dole for President! (5)
20. Orgy revealed by a bed upturned at University church (7)
21. Italian wife's soaring medley (7)
25. Einundzwanzig! (4)
26. Told an untruth by Schubert, for example? (4)
27. Every tea chest contains it (4)

anatol_merklich, Saturday, 17 January 2009 20:37 (seventeen years ago)

brilliant! have been meaning to do the same myself for quite some time. will give yours a go.

ledge, Saturday, 17 January 2009 20:42 (seventeen years ago)

Am stuck on a couple - 19 and 25. Overall I thought it was pretty good! No major probs with the clues, although not really sold on 10 and 11 (if I understand them). Good contructions, and mostly good surface readings. 16 and 24 I liked! Although the latter was the last to get. Oh, and an interesting theme, caught me out more than once!

ledge, Sunday, 18 January 2009 13:18 (seventeen years ago)

I think I got 25.

lemmy tristano (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 18 January 2009 17:21 (seventeen years ago)

That's a pretty good crossword, well done!

ailsa, Sunday, 18 January 2009 17:27 (seventeen years ago)

Wow thanks ppl you are too kind! :D

Re 25: haha sorry, that clue is pretty much inexcusable. What is "einundzwanzig"?

anatol_merklich, Sunday, 18 January 2009 22:13 (seventeen years ago)

Also agree 10 is weakish (singular-plural thing possibly not on) and 11 could probably be improved (I like the premise though). Do you mean 16 A or D btw? I was very pleased with D, while I thought A was perhaps a bit unfair.

anatol_merklich, Sunday, 18 January 2009 22:17 (seventeen years ago)

Frau.

lemmy tristano (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 18 January 2009 22:17 (seventeen years ago)

three times seven

lemmy tristano (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 18 January 2009 22:18 (seventeen years ago)

I liked 16 A!

einundzwanzig, google tells me, is twenty-one, or one and twenty... o i get it! that's probably just on the fair side of cheeky :) (xp)

ledge, Sunday, 18 January 2009 22:20 (seventeen years ago)

I don't get it. I knew it was 21 in German, what am I missing from there?

ailsa, Sunday, 18 January 2009 22:24 (seventeen years ago)

Oh, I do get it! ha! nice one!

ailsa, Sunday, 18 January 2009 22:25 (seventeen years ago)

two weeks pass...

Did you use any software to compile the grid, Anatol?

important old city fellow (6)

talk me down off the (ledge), Monday, 2 February 2009 17:17 (seventeen years ago)

Nah, just resized the rows and columns in Excel to give a square grid, and copied the design out of a book using black fill + borders. :)

anatol_merklich, Monday, 2 February 2009 17:55 (seventeen years ago)

(Then Alt + PrintScreen and pasting it into MS Paint...)

anatol_merklich, Monday, 2 February 2009 17:56 (seventeen years ago)

Mixed review doesn't blind Morris (6,6)

A continent's mad for pious emperor (11)

Charlie Rose Nylund, Monday, 2 February 2009 19:17 (seventeen years ago)

Constantine

talk me down off the (ledge), Monday, 2 February 2009 19:26 (seventeen years ago)

Yes indeed.

Charlie Rose Nylund, Monday, 2 February 2009 23:54 (seventeen years ago)

important old city fellow (6)

--g---

talk me down off the (ledge), Tuesday, 3 February 2009 23:15 (seventeen years ago)

urgent

lemmy tristano (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 4 February 2009 01:59 (seventeen years ago)

aye

carried around too much (2, 4)

talk me down off the (ledge), Wednesday, 4 February 2009 09:34 (seventeen years ago)

de trop

lemmy tristano (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 4 February 2009 14:15 (seventeen years ago)

Anatol, I (belatedly) enjoyed yr crossword very much, but despite having all the intersecting letters and a fair idea of what word might fit them, I don't get this one:

16. Force of about 50,000 "Fat Men" (7)

Anyone care to explain, or to offer some hints to interpretation (i.e. not some letters as I have them all)? Cheers!

(PS sorry if I am mistaken or jumping to conclusions here but I thought you were Norwegian, and if you've compiled a cryptic crossword in something that isn't yr native language then I may have to buy several hats just to doff them in amazement. wow!)

a passing spacecadet, Wednesday, 4 February 2009 14:40 (seventeen years ago)

Mixed review doesn't blind Morris (6,6)

------ ---d--

"einundzwanzig" is still going over my head.

Charlie Rose Nylund, Wednesday, 4 February 2009 15:14 (seventeen years ago)

Force of about 50,000 "Fat Men" is just a definition of the answer. What is the singular of 'Fat Men'?

einendzwanzig is german for 21, 21d was senhora, frau is german for senhora.

talk me down off the (ledge), Wednesday, 4 February 2009 15:18 (seventeen years ago)

einendzwanzig is german for 21, 21d was senhora, frau is german for senhora.

Ah, I thought it must be something like that. Thanks. (Feeling a bit Brazilian?)

Charlie Rose Nylund, Wednesday, 4 February 2009 15:36 (seventeen years ago)

Ah, had to go googling the figure of these singular Fat Men, which I had in fact tried first time round but got an answer which didn't add up - err, multiply up - so I'd decided that I was barking up the wrong tree. Wikipedia provides a more helpful answer in that respect. Cheers ledge.

a passing spacecadet, Wednesday, 4 February 2009 15:51 (seventeen years ago)

Heh sorry for slightly off clues. ;) And for derailing, as said...

Yep I'm Norwegian, Mr Cadet, but I've held a love for these blasted things since Fred Dellar's music-related xwds in the NME in the late 80's... I fondly remember

Peter's O'Tool (12)

in 1986 -- I'd already noted some anagrams and other structure here and there, but then the penny dropped just how wide the possibilities were. It is akin to what moley said in this thread I started: "... put me into a world filled with mad, perverse British aristocrats and eccentrics from the 18th century."

Heh xwds and that thread show a major thing with me actually, I love creative stuff where there is COMPLETE freedom within VERY STRICT formal constraints... :p

anatol_merklich, Friday, 6 February 2009 23:47 (seventeen years ago)

http://www.guardian.co.uk/crossword/cryptic/

I feel bad that I forgot who anatol was. Anatol, are you familiar with another Ole M, Ole Mathison, a talented Norwegian sax player who lives in NYC?

lemmy tristano (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 13 February 2009 19:56 (seventeen years ago)

Mixed review doesn't blind Morris (6,6)

----i- ---d--

Charlie Rose Nylund, Friday, 13 February 2009 23:40 (seventeen years ago)

Stevie Wonder!

cat anatomy expert (ledge), Friday, 13 February 2009 23:42 (seventeen years ago)

I din't know his real name until now - what's the deal with the change from Judkins to Morris?

cat anatomy expert (ledge), Friday, 13 February 2009 23:43 (seventeen years ago)


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