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A Brilliant New Cryptic Crossword 

Cracking The Cryptic
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** Today's Puzzle **
In a bonus video, Simon attempts a recent Independent crossword by Filbert - this was recommended to us by the Independent crossword editor, Mike Hutchinson. And it is VERY clever!
Give it a try at the link below:
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This puzzle appeared on 24 July 2022.
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8 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 212   
@glum_hippo
@glum_hippo 2 года назад
That ‘inst’ clue is exactly the kind of thing that compels me to continue admiring cryptic crosswords from a safe distance
@chris5619
@chris5619 2 года назад
Whenever I see these cryptic crossword videos, I can’t help but think Simon is trolling us.
@Astervista
@Astervista 2 года назад
@@chris5619 I always watch these videos at home because I fear people will think I am watching some satanic initiation ceremony if I watch them in public. Seen from the outside a sentence like “Frameless spectacles, what a spectacle is a sight, and if you take sights, the plural of spectacles, and you remove its frame, you remove the outside, you get I G H T” could very well be interpreted as a mad man blabbering
@SimonSideburns
@SimonSideburns 2 года назад
I agree that these expert puzzles are beyond me, but do a search for Lovatt's daily cryptic crosswords and watch the examples on that - they really are of a level for us mere mortals. I do one a day and can take anything from under 10 minutes to maybe 40 if my mind isn't on it or I'm not seeing the answers. They are definitely pitched at those just starting out in cryptic crosswords, and they get easier the more of them you have a go at. They're based in Australia, and a new daily crossword appears every day at approximately 3pm BST.
@fussyboy2000
@fussyboy2000 2 года назад
Words like inst are kept alive purely for the benefit of crossword compilers
@bluerizlagirl
@bluerizlagirl 2 года назад
Couldn't have come at a better time for me -- I was wondering about this only the other day! I knew "ult(imo)" was last month and "prox(imo)" was next month, but I couldn't for the life of me remember what the abbreviation was for "this month".
@randomjunk1977
@randomjunk1977 2 года назад
Watching Simon solve one of these and explain how some of these answers tie fully into every little word of the clue is like watching the world's most deranged conspiracy theorist talk about how the illuminati is leaving hidden messages everywhere except actually correct for once.
@pedders9380
@pedders9380 2 года назад
1a - Doctor Doctor, I'm a photograph that needs processing to see 5a - Well then, cure is to be developed Genius concept for a cryptic
@DerIntergalaktische
@DerIntergalaktische 2 года назад
First time I see this kind of cross word and I never felt this stupid before. I don't think I would have figured out even one of these. This needs some kind of dark magic to be solved XD
@iabervon
@iabervon 2 года назад
There's a Star Trek movie where they talk about "transparent aluminum" as a lightweight strong transparent material, which sounds ridiculous initially, but it turns out that corundum (which is what rubies and sapphires are) is a crystal of aluminum oxide (a.k.a. alumina), and is clear if it doesn't have any impurities, and synthetic corundum is used for exactly the applications Star Trek described. Anyway, because of the Star Trek reference, I knew the mineralogy trivia in that clue.
@benyoung2014
@benyoung2014 2 года назад
I think the 19 down confusion at 29:50 is that PLOY (wheeze) is underneath (lifting) ME backwards (up) to give EMPLOY. The ‘lifting’ and the ‘up’ are different instructions - more sneakiness from this crossword
@ChrisRemo
@ChrisRemo 2 года назад
Very happy to see more cryptic content on the channel! Thanks for a great video, Simon. Regarding 19d, the wordplay arguably parses in a Times-worthy manner: Wheeze (PLOY) is “lifting” (holding above it) “myself up” (ME reversed).
@adamlord1891
@adamlord1891 2 года назад
I read it as, if you are "up to" something, you are carrying out a "ploy".
@SpinyBadger
@SpinyBadger 2 года назад
Yes, that was how I read it. It's not an ordered charade, but the instruction is perfectly clear. I often find these days that when my first instinct is that I'm not sure about the clue, on reflection it looks both fair and clever.
@mikechappell5849
@mikechappell5849 Год назад
Yes, Chris Remo has it right
@bluerizlagirl
@bluerizlagirl 2 года назад
"Effing" and "blinding" are the two types of swearing in English: Effing (as in the F-word) refers to using those words that are biological in origin (think: body parts, natural functions), and blinding (as in "God blind me!" which became "Blimey!") is using words that are theological in origin (think: irreverent "instant prayer").
@jkid1134
@jkid1134 Год назад
I couldn't remember this and I couldn't even Google it effectively, but I managed to find this comment again.
@jkid1134
@jkid1134 Год назад
Here I am again
@KeplersDream
@KeplersDream 2 года назад
Did anyone else spot how 5A is the punchline to the 1A Doctor, Doctor joke?
@kuhleang1092
@kuhleang1092 2 года назад
6:22 had me sweating
@HazhuPazhu1
@HazhuPazhu1 Год назад
I was looking for this comment
@jakedanielsen4512
@jakedanielsen4512 Год назад
And the way he didn't hesitate
@nouration9685
@nouration9685 4 месяца назад
I genuinely thought "Negro" at first, which is Spanish for black
@jensschmidt
@jensschmidt 2 года назад
I lived in the US for a total of three years and am fluent in English (although no native speaker), but these puzzles are about as intuitive to me as a Phistomefel sudoku 🙂
@bilistooka_go_boom
@bilistooka_go_boom 2 года назад
I am a native English speaker, and I agree with you assessment
@ellienewman1005
@ellienewman1005 2 года назад
A lot of these seem to involve British references, so that may be an addition difficulty factor for those of us more used to American English
@Anne_Mahoney
@Anne_Mahoney 2 года назад
It's a British thing -- being fluent in American Englsh won't get you very far with cryptic crosswords. I'm a native speaker (American) and I grew up watching my father do cryptic crosswords (hard to find in the US in those days, too!) -- and I STILL can't make heads or tails of some of these clues. I was so proud of myself that I got "Pilates" in this puzzle, and that's about all I got independent of Simon.
@Qruey
@Qruey 2 года назад
That "night" is deceiving.
@Wecoc1
@Wecoc1 2 года назад
I thought the same thing.
@dkamm65
@dkamm65 2 года назад
19D Seems perfectly sensible. 'Wheeze' (ploy) is literally lifting 'myself up' (em) above its head.
@nathanweston9681
@nathanweston9681 2 года назад
Preposterous as a reversal indicator is new to me, but lovely. Nice solve, some fantastically misleading surfaces in there.
@nendwr
@nendwr 2 года назад
Totally agree. And the Latin roots are really quite obvious. I'd just never thought about the etymology of that word.
@Anne_Mahoney
@Anne_Mahoney 2 года назад
One of my favorite words precisely because of its etymology. Also, if your cat is doing something silly, you can call him preposter-puss.
@bukkfrig
@bukkfrig 2 года назад
If you have an anagram indicator, is it allowed for the material to be just reversed rather than completely shuffled? What I'm getting at is, even if preposterous did not mean "inverted," could the "absurd, ridiculous" definition be used to indicate an anagram, and then the reversed letters are just one of the possible permutations?
@joekerr5418
@joekerr5418 2 года назад
10-across got me sweating
@houdiniG01
@houdiniG01 2 года назад
As someone that learned English in school and not as my mother tongue, I can confirm this is hard to keep track of
@oMSoundblind
@oMSoundblind 2 года назад
I would add that it is not because of the way Simon explains the clues, but having a lack of knowledge about the, to us, obscure English words. I do really enjoy the word play that goes on in these puzzles, but I could never solve this one on my own.
@MrFitzomega
@MrFitzomega 2 года назад
Yeah there is absolutely no way I would have gotten even one of those words.
@houdiniG01
@houdiniG01 2 года назад
@RW couldn't agree more
@AshleySmith-dw6wh
@AshleySmith-dw6wh 2 года назад
I was worried at 6:18 not going to lie
@mooseteeq
@mooseteeq 2 года назад
Never heard of effing and blinding? Also, that Rush/Aldridge reference is magnificent.
@Fogmeister
@Fogmeister 2 года назад
As someone who isn't a cryptic crossword person I saw "tollbooth" almost instantly.
@harrygoodwin1795
@harrygoodwin1795 2 года назад
I love the cryptic crossword vids! Would love to them regularly
@isaacthek
@isaacthek 2 года назад
Proud of myself for seeing alumina WAY before Simon not getting how it got into the clue
@davidmiller9485
@davidmiller9485 2 года назад
Yeah i got it as soon as i say the ruby clue. The sapphire clue is redundant since sapphire's are rubies of a different color.
@MonkehBuns
@MonkehBuns 2 года назад
I didn't know about rubies but when he said it must be a chemical it just looked like it had something to do with aluminum and then I saw it must be based on alumna.
@davidmiller9485
@davidmiller9485 2 года назад
@@MonkehBuns Rubies (sapphires are a type of ruby btw) are made from Aluminum Oxide also known as corundum due to the impurities that give it it's red color. Chromium, Iron, Titanium and Vanadium are the impurities. My youngest daughter and my wife both are into rock collecting (for different reasons. My wife makes jewelry and my daughter is a rock hound who likes to tumble them to set on a shelf) and i've gotten a side education in rocks because of it. :)
@bluerizlagirl
@bluerizlagirl 2 года назад
@@davidmiller9485 If you ever end up in prison, you can contrive somehow to order a geology starter kit, with a chisel (which you can use to tunnel out of your cell) and a "how to identify different minerals" poster (which you can tape to the wall directly over your tunnel entrance to hide it).
@user-kn8bu8ue6z
@user-kn8bu8ue6z 2 года назад
6:24 imma be honest, I didn't think of night
@andrewgrant6516
@andrewgrant6516 2 года назад
Clearly Simon doesn't swear enough. While he sticks to bobbins, the rest of us are effing and blinding.
@Shudnawz
@Shudnawz 2 года назад
Blinding, is that a writearound for bloody? Effing if clearly referring to the F-word, yes?
@Mr_Haddles
@Mr_Haddles 2 года назад
I usually think too literally for most cryptic crossword clues, but 18 Down was the first time I've got a clue before you've started explaining how you get it (though the L helped)!
@bazcuda
@bazcuda 2 года назад
"inst" is a contraction of "instante mense" which is Latin for "current month". It's always worth having a list of the most common Latin phrases and abbreviations that English uses when doing cryptic crosswords 😜
@th.nd.r
@th.nd.r 2 года назад
I agree, 14 across was my favorite as well! Brilliant crossword Filbert, brilliantly solved Simon, you and Mark blow me away with these cryptic solves! I for one would love to see more cryptics on the channel.
@XeniaStCharlesIrisLlyllyth
@XeniaStCharlesIrisLlyllyth 2 года назад
I could never have solved this myself, but I was very pleased that I figured out source and pilates slightly quicker than you did 😊
@HeroDarkStorn
@HeroDarkStorn 2 года назад
Yay, I got "Toll booth" quite early (mostly by thinking what a lane for spending could be), and I also was not able to further justify it. That makes me as good at these as Simon, right? Thank you for keeping on making these, it's like watching world class magic show, but the props are puns and the budget is infinite.
@sevret313
@sevret313 2 года назад
Seems like a nice trick really. It tries to lead you somewhere else if you try to be too clever, but you're supposed to take it literary.
@leileleileleile
@leileleileleile 2 года назад
I love watching crosswords (cryptic or not) solved--more of this please! I enjoyed it so much!
@Thoms-82
@Thoms-82 2 года назад
Love this. Thanks a lot. Keep them coming!
@steelfabric
@steelfabric 2 года назад
Sydneysider is the word you're looking for, Simon.
@geminimaxxim
@geminimaxxim 2 года назад
What a delightful peek into the crossword world. I think I understand pretty well how the clues work, but I don't know if I know enough obscure definitions to be able to solve them xD
@tyrgannusgaming6657
@tyrgannusgaming6657 2 года назад
Ah! Always nice to get a morning video!
@leesunderland3849
@leesunderland3849 2 года назад
I regularly finish the Times, Guardian and Telegraph Toughie. The Times allows just one lurker, the Guardian can have multiple lurkers and the Telegraph maybe has one or two. Regarding your comment about solutions being the wrong way round, The Times mainly plays fair, but if you get the answer, then I suppose it’s acceptable. Setter Paul in the Guardian can be nice and tricky. Clue of the day = nemesis. Thanks for the vlog.
@BobDylan530
@BobDylan530 2 года назад
Just want you to know Simon, that the concept of "going steady" is not just an English thing, people said it in the US as well, but it is DEFINITELY an old thing
@BookofAeons
@BookofAeons 2 года назад
Here in the States we don't call a date "my steady," but we would say we were "going steady" with them.
@bruceyanoshek626
@bruceyanoshek626 Год назад
You're seeing 19 down slightly wrong. "Myself up" is "em", and "ploy" is lifting it (holding it up), so the word order is fine
@archivist17
@archivist17 2 года назад
Some amazing clues there 👏 I was shouting Alumina before the end, but there were a lot I would never have cracked.
@pengoschwortz4734
@pengoschwortz4734 2 года назад
Always love the cryptic crosswords videos. They’re absolutely my favorite
@adamheywood113
@adamheywood113 2 года назад
Fortunately Fosters doesn't qualify as a beer
@duzehalo
@duzehalo 2 года назад
I'm always in awe of constructors' skill, flexibility and playfulness with these clues, especially with ones like 12 across, 14 across or 24 down. Brilliant! Once the answer is found - everything falls into place, but, my dog, some of these are either super hard or simply unsolvable for me :D (I've been pausing the video for some trying to come up with the answer myself)
@DXingTV
@DXingTV 6 месяцев назад
Medically, sleep and unconscious are totally different. Sleep is a state of rest from which a person may be roused. An unconscious person is a state of where someone is unusable to all standard stimuli. Therefore, either the setter made an unfortunate mistake, or the definition and answer have a different relationship to that which is medically correct. I am happy to learn the explanation. Thanks, Frank
@davidmiller9485
@davidmiller9485 2 года назад
Rubies (which sapphires are a form of) are made from the mineral corundum or aluminum oxide (yeah high school chem). If you have never played subnautica you might want to give it a shot since they tell you what rubies are made from. (plus it's fun)
@elmoo88
@elmoo88 2 года назад
Aluminium 😬 I sooo second your suggestion for Subnautica, it's one of my alltime favorites, although it's probably not puzzly enough for this channel I'd say.. 😢
@davidmiller9485
@davidmiller9485 2 года назад
@@elmoo88 :) he's been playing other games that aren't all that "puzzly" lately. Then again, that's why i said "you might want" instead of i would like to see and you're right, Subnautica is a wonderful game. Sometimes it's nice to just play for the atmosphere. :)
@Planetoid52
@Planetoid52 2 года назад
The 'constant' in 7D is probably referring to that most famous of constants... c = speed of light... rather than c being an abbreviation for the word constant (when removing that letter from 'active'). Apologies if this has already been noted.
@GenWivern2
@GenWivern2 2 года назад
Effing and blinding! Thanks for the tip off, Simon ... must say that it's been a while since I've been so irritated by a crossword. Very good indeed in places, though, unlike that wretched website. 🙂
@maggieb6297
@maggieb6297 2 года назад
Baha just yelling ALUM at the screen
@Melissa_Hz
@Melissa_Hz 2 года назад
This was crazy, never seen a crossword like this! I was proud and surprised when I figured out pilates almost right away.
@GordonjSmith1
@GordonjSmith1 2 года назад
Excellent puzzle. Interesting setter style. Loved it.
@insectbah
@insectbah Год назад
So many super neat clues! Thanks for solving it for us so I could enjoy them :)
@keithlewis7205
@keithlewis7205 2 года назад
So much fun! Please keep doing these
@emilywilliams3237
@emilywilliams3237 2 года назад
I was hoping there would be a cryptic puzzle sometime soon on the channel. Thanks, Simon! I really enjoy these, and appreciate your explanations. I am beginning, a tiny bit, to not be totally flummoxed by these sorts of crosswords, and seeing you and Mark do these is giving me more interest in American-style crosswords (which are generally much, much, much easier for me - apart from the many popular culture references which I simply don't know). A couple of notes: to "pay a penny" - I have heard of that meaning to take a wee, as you so charmingly put it. Maybe in some novel or other that I read? Not sure. "Going steady" is definitely in my vocabulary for having someone special that all dates happen with. I laughed at your discomfiture at "semen" and even "womb" figuring into this crossword. Well, maybe not total discomfiture, but a bit surprised, maybe, at having to explain that kind of thing on the channel? Again, kind of cute. Loved this video!
@Anne_Mahoney
@Anne_Mahoney 2 года назад
I knew "spend a penny" and for some reason I had the idea that it refers specifically to women. According to the OED it's a reference to pay toilets, and the first citation is only from 1945. I do love watching Simon's cryptic solves. It's a different activity from Mark's monthly battle with the Times club special: Simon picks puzzles that he knows have clever features, maybe a theme, and they're usually not quite as crazy hard as the Times monthly.
@emilywilliams3237
@emilywilliams3237 2 года назад
@@Anne_Mahoney I agree. Simon and Mark approach so much of sudoku and crosswords with enough differences that it makes it a really well-rounded experience. Brilliant that they are friends and have partnered on this channel!
@MarkBDancer
@MarkBDancer 2 года назад
Others have commented about "effing and blinding" meaning to swear. The effing bit is obvious, but less so, the "blind" is short for "God blind me", nowadays invariably shortened to "blimey".
@ChrisKerrison
@ChrisKerrison 2 года назад
I watched this last night 20 minutes after I informed my friends "I'm abed". A form I've not used for probably over 40 years!
@helenlomas1012
@helenlomas1012 2 года назад
Thanks for the crossword. Love ‘em.
@adamgrimsley2900
@adamgrimsley2900 Год назад
That Stripper clue is brilliant
@geezerama
@geezerama 2 года назад
I briefly had Sobeit at 6 across. Great solve.
@warrenbrodsky7409
@warrenbrodsky7409 2 года назад
preposterous from in pre- and -posterior. "End in the beginning"(you can see chambers notes this in the latin)
@saityusufbulur3366
@saityusufbulur3366 5 месяцев назад
Even though SOURCE makes sense, I argue that SOBEIT can also be an answer to 5a. "Well then, cure is to be developed". "Developed" is an anagram indicator, "is to be" is an anagram and it can be written as "so be it". This alternative answer also matches the description. Well then = So be it.
@dglthrawn1
@dglthrawn1 2 года назад
Could the reading of 19D be 'ploy' lifting 'me up', so 'ploy' would be below 'em'?
@DelGuy03
@DelGuy03 Год назад
I feel pleased with myself (would this be "chuffed" in the UK?) that I interpreted "old girl" as "alumna" as soon as that clue was shown? It comes of reading Sayers and other mystery writers who set their stories in Oxford and refer to the "old girls" coming back for a visit or a Gaudy. I understand about "inst" because it (along with "ult") comes up often in Victorian literature (like Dickens), when stuffy legal types write letters -- "Regarding yours of the 5th inst..."
@friedrichfaust1366
@friedrichfaust1366 3 месяца назад
For 18, I thought the reasoning was a pro being someone who gets paid and cure being the cooking technique that involves smoking. Like a lot of cured meats are smoked. Might be wrong idk
@cqzen217
@cqzen217 2 года назад
Melbournian here. A person from Sydney is a Sydneysider.
@SomethingWellesian
@SomethingWellesian 2 года назад
Simon, you might not think of “blind” meaning “swear” but I expect you’ve heard the expression “effing and blinding”. Edit: also, I think it’s fair (somewhat at least) to describe toll booths as stops in lanes.
@blargo
@blargo 2 года назад
"wheeze" as a synonym for "trick"? Who knew?
@patrickflanagan8008
@patrickflanagan8008 2 года назад
Fascinating solution, well done Sir.
@quinnbartlett7233
@quinnbartlett7233 9 месяцев назад
30:10 the wording is much better as it is, the synonym of wheeze is lifting "me" up
@SpinyBadger
@SpinyBadger 2 года назад
I find the Indy website hard going, but one advantage of the small number of visible clues at one time is that it helps to focus on the clue currently being discussed, without the distraction of "I can't do this, what's 26a?" I can be guilty of this. ☺️
@lukerichardson8097
@lukerichardson8097 Год назад
Yesterday I was screaming clear at my phone. Today I was adamant that there were no words ending SK. Maybe I'm not as brilliant as I thought
@teamcyeborg
@teamcyeborg 2 года назад
Someone PLEASE take a clip of Simon saying "You're sexy. You're hot. Hot. Hot legs" at around 17:12 out of context
@_bigblind
@_bigblind 2 года назад
I think "Wheeze lifting myself up" might work if you see it as "ploy" pushing up "em" from below.
@carolprince16
@carolprince16 2 года назад
I read 19D as WHEEZE (ploy) lifting (as in holding up or bearing above it) MYSELF UP (EM) which works. :)
@YodasPapa
@YodasPapa 2 года назад
42:00 The phrase "effing and blinding" is the clue
@DrDaveW
@DrDaveW 7 месяцев назад
Wheeze is lifting (supporting) "me" up, so it seems okay to me. There's both "lifting" and "up" in the clue.
@muskerp
@muskerp 2 года назад
i think that the constant that is lacking in restorative is C for the speed of light e=mc2
@longwaytotipperary
@longwaytotipperary 2 года назад
Simon explains the trickery and makes it all look easy. Could I now solve one of these? 🤣 (but I do look up the words I don't know and therefore a little bit smarter than I was before.)
@stephenlamb90
@stephenlamb90 2 года назад
I guess 'blind' for 'swear' is where we get 'effing and blinding'
@longwaytotipperary
@longwaytotipperary 2 года назад
Never heard that expression
@davidlevesque5974
@davidlevesque5974 2 года назад
For employ, could it be that the word for wheeze is lifting (like, weight lifting pose, lifting something over your head) the word for myself (which is reverse with up)? Maybe it's not backwards viewed this way.
@AhsimNreiziev
@AhsimNreiziev 2 года назад
That's what I was thinking as well.
@nendwr
@nendwr 2 года назад
Barings Bank went bust in 1995; so 27 years ago.
@howardpayne4128
@howardpayne4128 2 года назад
Hi Simon, effing and blinding is an expression.
@widgetb
@widgetb 2 года назад
Yay more cryptic content!
@pengoschwortz4734
@pengoschwortz4734 2 года назад
32:16 I took preposterous as an anagram indicator If you scramble the words of “no” your only option is to reverse it I know the dictionary supports reversal, but I thought it was a great anagram indicator instead
@werbone
@werbone 2 года назад
Very enjoyable watch, but some tough word plays there!
@pelahnar4
@pelahnar4 2 года назад
I thought tollbooth was straightforward - too much so. It was the first thing I thought of, because I have zero ability to read the cryptic parts of these clues. Literally reading the clue exactly as it is: a place on a road where you stop and pay money: tollbooth. There's nothing cryptic about it (that I can see). This could be a clue in a regular crossword puzzle, without the question mark, even.
@zmaj12321
@zmaj12321 2 года назад
Indeed, British cryptics sometimes have clues that are basically just puns with no wordplay (called "cryptic definitions"). As Simon explains, that clue is worded to sound like it involves urination. Since you're talking about question marks in regular crosswords, I assume you're from the U.S.? In that case, I'll let you know that U.S. cryptics generally have no cryptic definitions, for the exact reason that they seem like normal clues from our perspective.
@Stu_1977_SEmelb
@Stu_1977_SEmelb 2 года назад
Yes, exactly what Zain said - plus more specifically, I think, the clue was intended to conjure up images of somebody finding a lane (or lane way, or discreet back alley) to stop and have a quick wee behind the buildings, but in fact the "lane" was really meaning one long, continuous section of a road, for vehicles. I think it was pretty good for one of those unexpected "cryptic definitions" which turns the ambiguous surface appearance into something completely unexpected; not having the usual format of a standard definition and cryptic definition hidden together, whilst still making perfect sense.
@limegreenelevator
@limegreenelevator 2 года назад
Re 25A, "spending a penny" is slang for going to the bathroom, so I think that's what the surface was going for.
@KevFrost
@KevFrost 2 года назад
I was effing and blinding at the complexity
@Wolfinator234
@Wolfinator234 2 года назад
3 down was a genius clue
@DeAuTh1511
@DeAuTh1511 2 года назад
where can I get the chambers dictionary and thesaurus program that you're using? I can't seem to find anything official for Windows
@benmiller9119
@benmiller9119 2 года назад
more failures at looking over his correct work than the work itself XD incredible stuff!
@nickloader3184
@nickloader3184 2 года назад
Only one I got even marginally before Simon was SOURCE realising the def was 'Well' seconds before he did.
@msolec2000
@msolec2000 2 года назад
Wheeze, lifting "myself up", maybe?
@npigwnl
@npigwnl 2 года назад
English is not my first language, but I still really enjoyed watching this. Love the dracula coat, by the way. 🧛‍♂️ 😉
@johanrahan3189
@johanrahan3189 2 года назад
Well done i thought 5 across was sobeit at first
@Raven-Creations
@Raven-Creations 2 года назад
That definitely wasn't an easy one. I would rate my skills slightly lower than yours, although sometimes able to spot things easily that you struggle with. I did like the wombat clue. I think it was the way the at preposition's normal close affinity with the following word was subverted, so one is led to thinking of say "strine" dropping "at home", leaving "stre". I got alumina quite early, because I knew rubies and sapphires were forms of alumina, but I struggled to see the alumna, because I was too busy looking for old girls' names (like Ada, Dinah, or Doris) or someone from the classics. Tollbooth was an amusing double definition, a "stop in lane" for the normal definition, and a cryptic way to refer to a toilet booth with an entry toll. Surely you've heard the tautological expression "effing and blinding", or "to eff and blind". Admittedly it's not the most obvious definition, but cryptic does mean hidden or obscured.
@mikeychrisanthus9948
@mikeychrisanthus9948 2 года назад
Last night, I was literally just wondering if you were going to do another cryptic crossword soon because I missed them. Actually I guess that was about 9 hours ago for me; I’m in the US so you guys upload in the late afternoon and early evening usually for me.
@bushidobrown6742
@bushidobrown6742 2 года назад
I only got Nemesis, Tollbooth and Employ. That should count for something
@stumbling
@stumbling 2 года назад
5a. I was thinking SOURCE as in source code, which is "developed" by software engineers.
@stumbling
@stumbling 2 года назад
I thought I was clever with 20a. using ABUELA (Spanish for "grandmother") but that was a red herring.
@tonyroberts3926
@tonyroberts3926 2 года назад
Don't worry Simon. Fosters is nothing like beer
@peterjongsma2779
@peterjongsma2779 2 года назад
Talk about Crazed Obscurantism. But well solved.
@pengoschwortz4734
@pengoschwortz4734 2 года назад
Idk I think 19D works fine The word for wheeze is lifting the word for “myself” up
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