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ninalanyon · 61-69, T
I had no idea so I cheated and used https://www.crosswordsolver.org/solve/--rot--/10
I think it must be XEROTIC.
I think it must be XEROTIC.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@ninalanyon I would not have known that - it's a new word to me!
It looks like a term from one or another branch of science but the grammar of the clue does not seem quite to match the answer, which won't help.
My local paper changed its puzzle page several months ago, either that or its supplier changed it. Either way the crossword is significantly harder, and sometimes I am lucky to solve more than 3 or 4 clues.
I managed about half of yesterday's, out of 24, including:
and
(6, ending in N)
......
Keep scrolling...
I'm not going to give it away yet.
...
tum-ti-tum.....
That's ought be off a smart-phone's miniscule screen.
not a 19" monitor though.
.....
....
.....
Let's try here.
They are respectively, Enforce and Yeoman.
It looks like a term from one or another branch of science but the grammar of the clue does not seem quite to match the answer, which won't help.
My local paper changed its puzzle page several months ago, either that or its supplier changed it. Either way the crossword is significantly harder, and sometimes I am lucky to solve more than 3 or 4 clues.
I managed about half of yesterday's, out of 24, including:
Some men for centuries, administer vigorously.
(7, ++F+++E)and
One may questionably seek old farmer
(6, ending in N)
......
Keep scrolling...
I'm not going to give it away yet.
...
tum-ti-tum.....
That's ought be off a smart-phone's miniscule screen.
not a 19" monitor though.
.....
....
.....
Let's try here.
They are respectively, Enforce and Yeoman.
ninalanyon · 61-69, T
@ArishMell I don't see how one gets from the clue to the word even when I have both in front of me. But then again I've always been really bad at cryptic crosswords. A girlfriend at uni. used to do the Guardian crossword usually in less than 20 minutes.
So how does one get from some men for centuries to enforce and from One may questionably seek old farmer to yeoman?
So how does one get from some men for centuries to enforce and from One may questionably seek old farmer to yeoman?
emmasfriend · 46-50, F
@ninalanyon
The first clue contains the letters within the words of the clue F is not a common letter, so look for it: mENFORCEnturies ;
The second clue needs to spoken out loud: "Yo man?" and yeoman is an old word for a worker on the land.
The first clue contains the letters within the words of the clue F is not a common letter, so look for it: mENFORCEnturies ;
The second clue needs to spoken out loud: "Yo man?" and yeoman is an old word for a worker on the land.
ninalanyon · 61-69, T
@emmasfriend 😐
Now I feel really dim!
Now I feel really dim!
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@ninalanyon Crossword compilers often write three-part clues, but you need work out which part is which. The three are the "source code" as it were, a method hint, and the synonym for the answer.
They all have individual styles too, so though some of these instruction-clues may be fairly general they don't work for all.
So:
Three parts:
(1) "Some" is this compiler's hint that the answer is hidden within -
(2) the next bit of the text, to find -
(3) the synonym or definition for the last phrase.
The some is therefore the "men for centuries" to mean "adminster vigorously".
It is not as Emmasfriend suggests. Instead:
(1)"one may", for which-
(2)"questionably" hints this is an anagram we need "seek" for -
(3) the word for an "old farmer" - you also need remember to take the meanings of adjectives broadly.
'
The first I cracked, 1 Across as well, needs some national general knowledge, as it holds a definite British reference.
In British crosswords, "Engineers" often cites the Army's Royal Engineers regiment, so that immediately suggested "RE".
"Bagging"... Hmmm.
"Broken bulb debris"
Got it. 'Bagging' means the letters RE embrace an anagram ('broken') of "bulb", and the answer means "debris".
"RUBBLE" (R - ubbl - E).
'
17A had me puzzled for a while.
I knew "copper", and often other metallic elements' names, almost always mean the chemical symbol, "Cu" in this one. Just as letters, not as the element itself. That's a start. I could not solve the words crossing it so had no letters already there to help, and could not see where 'Cu' would fit.
Then I recalled the phrase "Cut in", meaning the 'interrupt' whose synonym we seek. Let's test it:
CU+/IN
Of course! Though now commonly replaced by the American word "can", the usual English word for the food container used to be "tin" (from the tin-plate[d steel] of its material).
There we are: CUT IN, with the 'T' from 'tin' taken by CUT.
'
Try a crossword from another newspaper and I'd probably be stuck, because it takes a while, helped by later examining the answers, to learn an individual compiler's style.
The hardest I see regularly are those in the Radio Times. As this is a TV and radio listings publication, some of its very cryptic clues might be related to sports and entertainments. If so, it compounds the difficulty for me, as my knowledge of those subjects is very limited. Typically holding 40-50 words, I rarely solve more than about half a dozen!
They all have individual styles too, so though some of these instruction-clues may be fairly general they don't work for all.
So:
Some men for centuries administer vigorously
Three parts:
(1) "Some" is this compiler's hint that the answer is hidden within -
(2) the next bit of the text, to find -
(3) the synonym or definition for the last phrase.
The some is therefore the "men for centuries" to mean "adminster vigorously".
One may questionably seek old farmer
It is not as Emmasfriend suggests. Instead:
(1)"one may", for which-
(2)"questionably" hints this is an anagram we need "seek" for -
(3) the word for an "old farmer" - you also need remember to take the meanings of adjectives broadly.
'
The first I cracked, 1 Across as well, needs some national general knowledge, as it holds a definite British reference.
Engineers bagging broken bulb debris. (6)
In British crosswords, "Engineers" often cites the Army's Royal Engineers regiment, so that immediately suggested "RE".
"Bagging"... Hmmm.
"Broken bulb debris"
Got it. 'Bagging' means the letters RE embrace an anagram ('broken') of "bulb", and the answer means "debris".
"RUBBLE" (R - ubbl - E).
'
17A had me puzzled for a while.
Copper can interrupt (3,2)
I knew "copper", and often other metallic elements' names, almost always mean the chemical symbol, "Cu" in this one. Just as letters, not as the element itself. That's a start. I could not solve the words crossing it so had no letters already there to help, and could not see where 'Cu' would fit.
Then I recalled the phrase "Cut in", meaning the 'interrupt' whose synonym we seek. Let's test it:
CU+/IN
Of course! Though now commonly replaced by the American word "can", the usual English word for the food container used to be "tin" (from the tin-plate[d steel] of its material).
There we are: CUT IN, with the 'T' from 'tin' taken by CUT.
'
Try a crossword from another newspaper and I'd probably be stuck, because it takes a while, helped by later examining the answers, to learn an individual compiler's style.
The hardest I see regularly are those in the Radio Times. As this is a TV and radio listings publication, some of its very cryptic clues might be related to sports and entertainments. If so, it compounds the difficulty for me, as my knowledge of those subjects is very limited. Typically holding 40-50 words, I rarely solve more than about half a dozen!
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@emmasfriend Correct for how to solve "enforce" but sorry, you've gone astray for the method to find "yeoman".
It's an anagram of "One may"; and crosswords tend to avoid slang as that may not be sufficiently widely known. Where a word is slang, the clue is sometimes annotated to say so.
See my longer reply to Ninanylon for how it works.
'
Your "Yo man!" would work if the clue is something like:
"A very informal greeting, we hear, for old farmer."
"We hear" shows a spoken synonym for a possible "very informal greeting" sounds like the one we want for the "old farmer".
It's an anagram of "One may"; and crosswords tend to avoid slang as that may not be sufficiently widely known. Where a word is slang, the clue is sometimes annotated to say so.
See my longer reply to Ninanylon for how it works.
'
Your "Yo man!" would work if the clue is something like:
"A very informal greeting, we hear, for old farmer."
"We hear" shows a spoken synonym for a possible "very informal greeting" sounds like the one we want for the "old farmer".