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

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (5780 of them)

Except it would have to be 'doctor ing', ok, tired here.

ledge, Saturday, 22 December 2012 16:39 (thirteen years ago)

rmde @ having to get "spin" from "doctoring"

in a bizarre twist I've worked out

Make a face and be sick — over here best? (3,4)

from the cryptic stuff but not the actual meaning - idgi. it MUST be this answer because i have all of the verticals...

lex pretend, Saturday, 22 December 2012 16:41 (thirteen years ago)

I assume that (3,4) is the ----ing (4) on the --- (3) side of a boat (good for being seasick over) but it's not something that immediately came to mind until I had the letters

http://www.flickr.com/photos/cathys_photos/281097467/

Had not heard of the answer to "Beast (American) that doesn't go to sea (4)", I expect the pub quiz buffs know this stuff but I had to plug my guess into wikipedia

a panda, Malmö (a passing spacecadet), Saturday, 22 December 2012 17:33 (thirteen years ago)

I assume that (3,4) is the ----ing (4) on the --- (3) side of a boat (good for being seasick over) but it's not something that immediately came to mind until I had the letters

FFS FFS FFS

right, i have come to some sort of impasse. i have the following yet to get:

6a, 17a, 20a, 40a, 46a, 47a, 49a
8d, 9d, 11d, 27d, 28d, 33d, 34d, 42d

HELLLPPPPP this is consuming me

lex pretend, Saturday, 22 December 2012 19:35 (thirteen years ago)

oh yeah and 45a which i can't relate to the clue at all

lex pretend, Saturday, 22 December 2012 19:36 (thirteen years ago)

8d comes is an old French phrase if that's any help

Captain Humberbantz (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 22 December 2012 20:05 (thirteen years ago)

OK 45 across

"for good" = AY Retiring (going backwards) = YA

pupil = "L" for Learner

leaves English school = OUND(L)E

African capital = YAOUNDE

Captain Humberbantz (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 22 December 2012 20:12 (thirteen years ago)

i got 46a by basically DESPERATELY READING A DICTIONARY and a few others fell into place after that - don't really understand 34d though

"for good" = AY

really?! i have never heard of "ay" being used like that. suspicious

never heard of oundle either

lex pretend, Saturday, 22 December 2012 20:15 (thirteen years ago)

Oundle is a semi-famous public school

Ay = forever in Scots

Captain Humberbantz (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 22 December 2012 20:17 (thirteen years ago)

cryptic crosswords giveth and taketh away. one minute you're feeling smug for having heard of lysistrata, the next it's all "i have never even HEARD OF that"

lex pretend, Saturday, 22 December 2012 20:24 (thirteen years ago)

aha lysistrata, thanks

Captain Humberbantz (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 22 December 2012 20:27 (thirteen years ago)

is "wick" some sort of obscure term for a thousand or something? wrt 6a

(yes i am still doing this goddamnit)

lex pretend, Sunday, 23 December 2012 07:52 (thirteen years ago)

11d is one of those that makes perfect sense but i could have stared at that clue for a million years and never decoded it

lex pretend, Sunday, 23 December 2012 07:56 (thirteen years ago)

Very little space for food — I thrash wildly about (5,7)

^^utterly baffled why this is what it has to be

lex pretend, Sunday, 23 December 2012 08:07 (thirteen years ago)

I HAVE FINISHED IT!!!!!!!!!!!!

lex pretend, Sunday, 23 December 2012 10:37 (thirteen years ago)

Congrats!

indefinite number = n
repeated = twice
1000 = k
amateur = ham

other is anagram of "i thrash" with "bread" (food) in the middle

a panda, Malmö (a passing spacecadet), Sunday, 23 December 2012 10:39 (thirteen years ago)

yeah i worked out the latter one, i'd got 30a slightly wrong. good clue! as opposed to "twickenham" which is just tortuous kmt

lex pretend, Sunday, 23 December 2012 10:48 (thirteen years ago)

Both of the above are well into the "would never guess from the clue, can only find words that fit the letters and justify it from there" category for me. The anagram part of the bread one was obvious from the start but with 5 unknown letters missing I didn't get it until right near the end.

a panda, Malmö (a passing spacecadet), Sunday, 23 December 2012 11:00 (thirteen years ago)

it was the second to last one i got - basically got it because the ___d_h ending is so rare, it pretty much had to be a t in there, and hey presto "breadth" and oh right HAIRS.

lex pretend, Sunday, 23 December 2012 11:15 (thirteen years ago)

happy enough with brier but it's ye're language i spose

banlieue jagger (darraghmac), Sunday, 23 December 2012 11:47 (thirteen years ago)

congrats lex, finishing a prize araucaria is not to be sniffed at. started this morning, did not shun the help of this thread and i've got three and a half of the bastards to go.

ledge, Sunday, 23 December 2012 13:04 (thirteen years ago)

Increased production and went in to eat. (7)

I'll give you the checked letters, and see if you're as amused by their use of 'went' as I was!

S_E_D_P

Rocking Disco Santa (Dan Peterson), Monday, 24 December 2012 16:46 (thirteen years ago)

haha, but how is that one word?

lex pretend, Monday, 24 December 2012 17:00 (thirteen years ago)

like i've never even seen it hyphenated

lex pretend, Monday, 24 December 2012 17:00 (thirteen years ago)

I've never seen it as one word either, but found it actually exists. A request to increase production (usually without an increase in pay) is a....

Rocking Disco Santa (Dan Peterson), Monday, 24 December 2012 17:02 (thirteen years ago)

I quit experiment after difficult chores entailing many instruments (10)

Easy answer, but why am I not getting how 'I quit' works in this?

Rocking Disco Santa (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 15:25 (thirteen years ago)

Tral = trial (experiment) minus I.

Tim, Wednesday, 26 December 2012 15:37 (thirteen years ago)

(the letter I has quit the word trial, in case that wasn't clear)

Tim, Wednesday, 26 December 2012 15:38 (thirteen years ago)

Ah, thanks! I think I suck the worst at the ones where I have to think of a synonym and then remove a letter. My mind doesn't work that way for some reason.

Rocking Disco Santa (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 15:40 (thirteen years ago)

today i liked

The policeman in Perpignan releasing me before the end of Absolutely Fabulous (9)

very much

lex pretend, Wednesday, 26 December 2012 16:35 (thirteen years ago)

Nice. I'm doing Sunday's Everyman, and the clue is: Father Christmas, very large, captured by artist in California City. (5,4)

Is very large OS for oversized and artist RA for Royal Academician? Because holy hell...

Rocking Disco Santa (Dan Peterson), Friday, 28 December 2012 21:46 (thirteen years ago)

did anyone try the Xmas FT? 52 paired clues, alphabetically ordered answers with 2 of each letter, one each of the clues not fully defined with those clues having a common theme. You then have to fit in the answers jigsaw-style. Killed a lot of time over Xmas, still didn't finish it!

Neil S, Friday, 28 December 2012 22:24 (thirteen years ago)

xp yes, Dan, that looks right.

Fizzles, Saturday, 29 December 2012 08:31 (thirteen years ago)

RA is one of those ones like cricket abbreviations I've never seen in my life.

Rocking Disco Santa (Dan Peterson), Saturday, 29 December 2012 14:38 (thirteen years ago)

fairly common I find. they're with all the cricketers, sailors, university graduates and other f'ing ranks, poring with interest over the periodic table in that big geometrically chequered house in the setter's mind.

Fizzles, Saturday, 29 December 2012 14:46 (thirteen years ago)

i do sometimes feel like applying the rules of cryptic crosswords to vaguely contemporary stuff like, idk, nicki minaj references

lex pretend, Saturday, 29 December 2012 14:48 (thirteen years ago)

I don't know if this exactly follows the rules, but:

Rapper's picnic: Kim, in a jazz group, appearing. (5,5)

Rocking Disco Santa (Dan Peterson), Sunday, 30 December 2012 16:06 (thirteen years ago)

Coming to realize that my education is lacking in the likes of Shakespeare, Dickens etc. Do most people know that "Southey and his friends" were the Lake Poets?

Example: Sailor-neighbors of Chaucer's wife? One might consider them tubby. (4,5)

Actually my teenage son, attending a classics-based charter school, is getting more of these references than I do.

Rocking Disco Santa (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:13 (thirteen years ago)

yeah I think UK cryptics assume a certain knowledge of this kind of thing.

my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:30 (thirteen years ago)

lol the Chaucer one.

yeah a lot of crosswords assume certain kinds of erudite knowledge and "literature" wd be part of that

Broken Clock Britain (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:37 (thirteen years ago)

betraying my lack of such knowledge, but solution please!

Neil S, Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:38 (thirteen years ago)

Chaucer's wife = BATH
Sailors = SALTS

"Find in a tub" = "tubby" = "BATH SALTS"

Broken Clock Britain (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:39 (thirteen years ago)

Bath salts. The trifecta of Chaucer ref, antiquated sailor ref and groaner pun was just lol... okay... I have a lot to learn.

I needed a new screen name anyhoo.

Sailor-neighbor of Chaucer's wife (Tubby) (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:39 (thirteen years ago)

first word is a wifely character in Chaucer, second is a slang word for sailors

whole thing is something you might add to a bath

xxp

my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:40 (thirteen years ago)

thx, I get it! good clue!

Neil S, Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:40 (thirteen years ago)

god knows why certain things come up so much in cryptics. as soon as i see "sailor" i'm gonna think "salt", "tar", "RN"...it seems odd to have so much nauticality so commonly used

Broken Clock Britain (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:41 (thirteen years ago)

you forgot AB

heartless restaurant reviewer (ledge), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:41 (thirteen years ago)

esp Rufus in the Gdn on Mondays, he's notorious for his nautical refs

my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:42 (thirteen years ago)

That recent Araucaria with the Winter's Tale theme was rather beyond me in that respect. My work newsletter does a bumper Christmas issue with a crossword every year and the latest one had a Dickens theme, which was a bit daunting at first, but thankfully it only needed a knowledge of titles, not characters or plots.

That seems a fairer way to do it to me, but then my education is also pretty lacking when it comes to these things. Not really that my school didn't do those things, just that I never found the classics we did do interesting enough to get around to the others in my spare time. I've sort of meant to catch up on the complete works of Shakespeare one day but the entire concept of the Great Victorian Novel still fills me with dread tbh

(I quite liked that Chaucer one, though the second sentence seemed unnecessary)

a panda, Malmö (a passing spacecadet), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:42 (thirteen years ago)

but the second sentence is the definition part, without that there is no def.

my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram), Thursday, 10 January 2013 15:43 (thirteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.