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

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Patina!

individual meta dater (wins), Wednesday, 5 November 2014 22:23 (eleven years ago)

I got your latest one too (it's good) but I'll leave for others for a bit

individual meta dater (wins), Wednesday, 5 November 2014 22:25 (eleven years ago)

The wasps one isn't mine, it's from The Nation, but I laughed.

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 5 November 2014 22:33 (eleven years ago)

is that wasps as in WASPs? Can think of an answer but can't really justify it.

ledge, Thursday, 6 November 2014 12:45 (eleven years ago)

No

individual meta dater (wins), Thursday, 6 November 2014 13:14 (eleven years ago)

There's a bit of misdirection in this one

individual meta dater (wins), Thursday, 6 November 2014 13:14 (eleven years ago)

Quite clever misdirection imo.

I just did an Everyman with what must be a record (for me) number of words I had never heard of, or usages I had never seen:

Guncotton
Auster (for South wind)
Snaffle
E'er (for always)
Lay (for a song)
Rum (for unusual)

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 6 November 2014 19:23 (eleven years ago)

Russian opera reportedly runs with blood online? (6,4)

Not sure I'm getting this. It's Prince Igor. Runs = prints, and gore = blood. Is the "online" making it "E"-gore?

Good grief...

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Friday, 7 November 2014 20:12 (eleven years ago)

Yeah a bit of a stretch.

Had to cheat for psst *hangs head in shame* - it's a pretty straight clue, the lesson for me is to examine my preconceptions. I was so sure 'wasps sting' couldn't harbour any hidden words that I didn't even look. Gave it to some friends yesterday, they didn't get it either. Then we had a long discussion about the similarity or otherwise of psst and yo and the likelihood of us using either of them.

ledge, Sunday, 9 November 2014 18:06 (eleven years ago)

That's what's good about it, it's deceptive (& the solution being vowelless helps w that)

yo & psst aren't exactly synonymous but they can both be used to mean "listen up" so it works imo

individual meta dater (wins), Sunday, 9 November 2014 18:16 (eleven years ago)

also:

Rum (for unusual)

(Guardian prize spoiler warning) apparently a lustrum is a period of five years. Who knew.

ledge, Sunday, 9 November 2014 19:46 (eleven years ago)

I made this one up today:

Found during warmup: pet sheep, pig and frog, for example. (7)

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Friday, 14 November 2014 14:50 (eleven years ago)

nice :)

Stim McRaw (Noodle Vague), Friday, 14 November 2014 17:24 (eleven years ago)

ty! One of the things I've discovered since getting addicted to cryptics is that every word I see I compulsively deconstruct in my head.

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Friday, 14 November 2014 17:56 (eleven years ago)

Me too, although it rarely leads to a well defined clue. Here's one I struggled to fashion last night, somewhat lacking in finesse as usual:

Verbally introduced to a champagne socialist, primarily in charge within department for investigating the fundamental nature of things (11)

ledge, Monday, 17 November 2014 09:19 (eleven years ago)

tl;dr

koogs, Monday, 17 November 2014 09:35 (eleven years ago)

the rufus version: philosophy squared up to a science (11)

ledge, Monday, 17 November 2014 10:20 (eleven years ago)

zrgnculfvpf, i am guessing. "met a" and then some handwaving.

koogs, Monday, 17 November 2014 11:52 (eleven years ago)

Ha I like "champagne socialist" there but I don't think it quite works

Fairly peng (wins), Monday, 17 November 2014 13:17 (eleven years ago)

Male, brother of Rodney, and a boy for Champagne Socialist (9)

Sorry for British

Ratt in Mi Kitchen (Neil S), Monday, 17 November 2014 13:30 (eleven years ago)

xp met a phys sounds like fizz, socialist primarily = S, IC within. is how i break it down to an extent. i think it's sound...

ledge, Monday, 17 November 2014 14:16 (eleven years ago)

xp should've got that quicker, suppose i should be grateful it took a while to drag him from memory.

ledge, Monday, 17 November 2014 14:59 (eleven years ago)

hah apologies again

Ratt in Mi Kitchen (Neil S), Monday, 17 November 2014 15:06 (eleven years ago)

Here's my (super simple) made up one for today:

Urinate in South Dakota, go quickly! (5)

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Monday, 17 November 2014 17:09 (eleven years ago)

SPEED

Suggestion of pain in arse leads to arguing (6)

ledge, Friday, 21 November 2014 09:29 (eleven years ago)

Rowing

Sorry I don't have any clues to hand, will try to find something in tmrws paper

show me love alamuddin (qiqing), Friday, 21 November 2014 09:47 (eleven years ago)

> tmrws

got it! "tomorrow's"

koogs, Friday, 21 November 2014 09:59 (eleven years ago)

Lol

Wait, I've got one, it's my first go at a clue so be easy on me

Picture from the mad sight, get kicks (3,3,4)

show me love alamuddin (qiqing), Friday, 21 November 2014 10:05 (eleven years ago)

Ah shit excitement got the better of me, that should be (3,3,5)

show me love alamuddin (qiqing), Friday, 21 November 2014 10:07 (eleven years ago)

Brit not quite overcome by a task all too tricky for Li Na? (6,6)

:D

lex pretend, Sunday, 23 November 2014 15:11 (eleven years ago)

^^^ I glanced at that, and the rest of that puzzle. Gave up after 5 minutes, way too tough. I didn't get this one even looking at the answer:

Film notice written by pundits about that year’s output? (1,3,2,3,5)

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Monday, 24 November 2014 15:25 (eleven years ago)

An envelope (‘about’) of AYATTHER, an anagram (‘output’) of ‘that year’ in AD (‘notice’) plus ACES (‘pundits’), for the Marx Brothers film.

clear as mud eh. 'output' as anag indicator is weak, and 'aces' for 'pundits' hardly squares with most of the rentagobs you get on tv.

qiqing's has me stumped i'm afraid.

Kelly Gang Carey and the Mantels (ledge), Monday, 24 November 2014 15:28 (eleven years ago)

wth is ayatther?

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Monday, 24 November 2014 15:32 (eleven years ago)

it's all there...

Kelly Gang Carey and the Mantels (ledge), Monday, 24 November 2014 15:33 (eleven years ago)

Wait, what? I can't find this via Google or dictionary. Is this one of those that's too British for me?

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Monday, 24 November 2014 15:35 (eleven years ago)

an anagram (‘output’) of ‘that year’

Kelly Gang Carey and the Mantels (ledge), Monday, 24 November 2014 15:37 (eleven years ago)

But doesn't ayatther have to be a real word? Sorry, I'm completely not getting this.

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Monday, 24 November 2014 15:39 (eleven years ago)

the clue says "write 'ad' and 'aces' about an anagram of 'that year'", the anag doesn't have be a word. it's sound, but it's probably not fair, if you've got no hint as to what the anag should be.

Kelly Gang Carey and the Mantels (ledge), Monday, 24 November 2014 15:47 (eleven years ago)

Thanks! I have never seen one where the anagram is not a real word. Good example of why I could not do this puzzle.

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Monday, 24 November 2014 15:53 (eleven years ago)

I'm not sure it's that unfair actually, there is a hint for the "word" you need, it's the one that will complete the clue to make the name of a film. And I thought "film" was a bit of a thin definition but "marx bros film" would be too easy, and lots of people at fifteensquared.net got it from the letter count. I think it's a bit of a setter's fave due to its length and being full of common letters, pretty sure I've seen it before.

Kelly Gang Carey and the Mantels (ledge), Wednesday, 26 November 2014 13:07 (eleven years ago)

also worth pointing out that the setter of that clue was Enigmatist whose puzzles are always some of the hardest to solve

rising stones cross (anagram), Wednesday, 26 November 2014 13:57 (eleven years ago)

Yup that too.

Last ever Araucaria today, finished by Philistine. Might have enjoyed it (or been hugely frustrated) if I hadn't spoiled the key clue by skimming the article about it, just like it warned me not to.

Puzzle:
http://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/cryptic/26427
Article:
http://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/crossword-blog/2014/nov/25/unexpected-treat-fans-araucaria-guardian-crossword-setter

Kelly Gang Carey and the Mantels (ledge), Wednesday, 26 November 2014 14:38 (eleven years ago)

I suppose enough time has passed for revelation

ledge mine upthread is The Red Shoes

show me love alamuddin (qiqing), Thursday, 27 November 2014 00:45 (eleven years ago)

enjoyed that posthumous Araucaria, thanks ledge. Liked the theme a lot though it took me a while to get it.

I didn't understand how some of the ones at the bottom worked, even after I filled them in according to what fitted or the magic of the Cheat button, so I went to fifteensquared to look. The one I was particularly puzzled by was 2 alternative definitions and 4 wordplays in one clue! Completely didn't notice that, I had no idea what any of the clue except the theme indicator/first def and final wordplay were doing in the clue. (smacks forehead)

Also for ILXy lols I got the last letter of 23D wrong (still fitting the def) and tried to convince myself it might be a reference to Manda Rin of Glaswegian 90s indie combo being a bit annoying.

club mate martyr (a passing spacecadet), Friday, 28 November 2014 10:30 (eleven years ago)

Porcine life form found in craft trapped in white hole at first, then zero gravity (7)

Kelly Gang Carey and the Mantels (ledge), Monday, 1 December 2014 14:16 (eleven years ago)

nice

Ratt in Mi Kitchen (Neil S), Monday, 1 December 2014 14:18 (eleven years ago)

i liked these from the everyman this week

Rim around gold dish (5)

'Stub' - no clue for it, cryptically (11)

koogs, Monday, 1 December 2014 14:20 (eleven years ago)

xp But not taxing, clearly. I'm destined to be a Rufus.

Kelly Gang Carey and the Mantels (ledge), Monday, 1 December 2014 14:20 (eleven years ago)

the zero gravity bit at the end gave it away

Ratt in Mi Kitchen (Neil S), Monday, 1 December 2014 14:26 (eleven years ago)

^^^ yeah I worked backwards too. Here's an easy one I made up:

Singer staples most of map and half of visa. (5)

Deliciously hard yet very accessible (Dan Peterson), Monday, 1 December 2014 16:21 (eleven years ago)


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