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RONG Number puzzles no
longer fill Dr Watson with quite the dread that they used to, but they’re still
one of the most challenging of Azed’s specials.
Because every clue is at the wrong location for its solution, there’s more blind solving involved than usual. But Azed’s recommended method in the preamble is sound: solve a
clue, and then look for another clue of the same length that might contain a
definition of the solution. Dr Watson adds to this the more obvious ‘work in
pencil’, and don’t even think about trying to solve it interactively online.
Finally read the clue-writing instructions carefully, and read them again after
finishing the puzzle, as they can be confusing.
The constraints of the
Wrong Number format tend to bring out the best in Azed,
who finds some remarkable and entertaining ways of building in the locating
definitions (remember these must be integral to the clue as a whole), such as
the ‘poly ringtone’ at 28 down and Shelley poem at 23 across. Some clues may
look rather forced, but always playfully rather than painfully so.
In the explanations below the clues are numbered as they appear in the puzzle.
The notes in brackets indicate where their solutions go in the grid, and the
one-word definition that appears in the clue at that location.
3. Fancy small
number in fresh party hats. PHANTASTRY
(n in anag.;
35a; grotesque). This is Chambers
at its most annoying. The solution is in a group or words at phantasy, from
where the reader is directed to fantasy.
Here, at the end of the entry is ‘fantastry n.’ with
no definition at all. One can only assume it’s something fanciful or
fantastical.
11. Part of microscope
revealing a bug set’s lacking purity?
SUBSTAGE (anag.; 5d; apparatus). The anagram indicator ‘lacking purity’ is the
most strained of the puzzle, but quite original as a way of including the
definition of ‘pucelage’.
12. Whence one
may flush out treasure in chapter, long after?
CACHE (c ache; 8d; hoard). ‘Flush’, understood as a noun to locate ‘plesh’, is worked tidily into the definition of ‘cache’,
and ‘long after’ for ‘ache’ is cleverly misleading.
13. Force
introduced to e.g. arrow with new material inside. RELINED (lin in reed; 31a; repaired). A lin or linn
is a waterfall or force, and an arrow could be made from a reed.
18. Pinch. SCANT (26d; restrict). This is simply
the locating definition for ‘sneap’. ‘Scant’ itself
is only found through the locating definition ‘restrict’ at 26d. So the solver
must submit a clue to SCANT containing a definition of SNEAP.
21. No longer
being intact, clue’s shifting in part of paper?
PUCELAGE (anag. in page;
11a; purity). The solution is an old word for virginity or
‘intactness’.
23. Subject of
Shelley poem, energy in early summertime? Phooey! MALARKEY (lark e in May;
2d; trouble). Shelley’s ode is to a Skylark
specifically. All Azed’s
energy here has gone into the locating definition for ‘aeglogue’,
and the clue’s own definition is very much tacked on.
27. French
mathematician at shed in poet’s steading. FERM (Ferm(at); 6d; lodging). ‘Shed’ works very hard in this clue, as the
locator for ‘cast’, the subtraction indicator, and in the surface context of a
farm building. Mathematicians will have enjoyed spotting the wordplay.
30. What to call
a wee gem, in the manner of names given to one with little height. ALANNAH (à la n n a h; 7d; pet). The solution is in Chambers’ Some first names section, and is an Irish term of
endearment. Pleasing but quite forced, the clue deserves a question mark
somewhere, in Dr Watson’s view.
33. A
load on wheel edge – does it leave pitted appearance? ALASTRIM (a last rim; 19d;
disease). Alastrim
is a variety of smallpox that could leave the sufferer pockmarked. The surface
of the clue is much smoother.
2. E.g.
Penelope having trouble with bit of stuff for old units. CRUZADOS (Cruz ado s; 17d;
coins). The Spanish-born film star, who fortunately never
became Penelope Cruz Cruise, probably wouldn’t be familiar with the former
Brazilian currency.
4. Head of
louse that’s found in sunfish, one learned in theology! MOLLA (l in mola; 25d; teacher). Azed normally avoids utterly bizarre surfaces, but possibly
had no choice here with the need to locate ‘aphid’ (a plant louse), and the
result is at least memorable. Perhaps it’s a Sunni sunfish. It would be a rash
solver who failed to check ‘mola’, assuming the
solution must be MULLA.
7. Knave
cropped wretched thin pet pigeon?
JACINTH (Jac(k) + anag.; 30a; gem). A jacinth can be
both a gemstone and a fancy pigeon.
9. Act as e.g.
don losing heart? Not all students can be equal
here. TECH (te(a)ch;
28a; poly). The subsidiary indication looks like it’s
holding a locating definition in ‘don’, but it turns
out to be the extended definition of ‘tech’ that has it.
14. Ephraim and
ma wild about start of cheering for e.g. smarty-boots? AMPHIMACER (c in anag.; 1d; foot). It seems
astonishing that something as recondite as an amphimacer can be defined as
‘e.g. smarty-boots’ and ‘foot’, but it can. It’s a poetic foot of
long-short-long syllables, of which ‘smarty-boots’ is an example.
17. Emanation
from coins (olé!) miscast. ECLOSION (anag; 33a; appearance). Olé indeed! Why not
‘coins Leo squandered’?
19. Pastoral
disease (feverish) – the confused ogle inside.
AEGLOGUE (anag. in ague;
23a; poem). A most
unpromising looking word, but Azed spots ‘disease’ to
locate ‘alastrim’ and makes the most of it.
‘Pastoral’ works as a noun in the definition.
20. Cheap
place to stop for a bite, one with drunk around. BEANERY (an in beery; 22d;
diner). ‘Stop’, as in organ
stop, is the locating definition for ‘clarion’, which Chambers only confirms under the previous entry clarino.
28. Some
mariachis supplying unlikely poly ringtone!
ARIA (hidden; 34a; air).
Along with MOLLA, the most entertaining clue of the puzzle, necessity
begetting some great invention. But surely you can get Nessun Dorma for your mobile? Dr Watson confirms
you can, but won’t be publishing the links.
Across: 10. ONST (anag.; 29d; once); 15. CLARION (rio(t) in clan; 20d;
stop); 16. EGAL (hidden rev.; 9d; equal); 24. SNEAP (E in
snap; 18a; pinch); 31.
BREWING (anag.; 3d; boiling). 32.
PLESH (s in help, rev.; 12a; flush); 34. IRIS (hidden; 16a; flag); 35. NEPENTHEAN (E
pent in anag.; 14d; cheering). Down: 1. BRASS-FACED (f in Br ass ace
d; 3a; fresh); 3.
HAWKISH (h + anag.; 15a; warlike); 5.
VARIABLE (anag.; 21a; shifting); 6.
CAST (as in ct.; 27a; shed);
8. APHID (a P hid; 4d; louse); 22. BARACAN (bar a can; 13a; material); 25. ARERE (hidden
rev.; 32a; behind); 26.
CYMAR (hidden; 24a; coat);
29. MARD (r in mad; 10a; damaged).
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