![]() Please ensure you're connected to broadband/wifi rather than using your mobile phone connection (3G/4G). The Shipping Forecast Puzzle Book by Alan Connor, which is partly but not predominantly cryptic, can be obtained from the Guardian bookshop.For the best experience, you will need to have Zoom downloaded onto your computer. Individual letters: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N. Seasoned solvers: any favourite examples? Beginners: any questions? More guidanceĬryptic devices: hidden answers double definitions cryptic definitions soundalikes initial letters spoonerisms containers reversals alternate letters cycling stammering taking most of a word naked words first and last letters middle letters removing middle letters defining by example.īits and bobs: Roman numerals Nato alphabet Greek letters chemistry abbreviations for countries points of the compass more points of the compass playing cards capital letters boys and girls apostrophes cricket alcohol the church politics Latin royals newspapers doctors drugs music animals cars cities rivers boats when the setter’s name appears when the solver appears “cheating”. We start with BUSHED (“exhausted”), treat the D as a Roman numeral ( more on those here), cut the 500 (D) down to 10% of its value (L) and we have our measure of “capacity”: BUSHEL.įinally, retired programmer Nutmeg pulls off the sneakiest of tricks in meaning pretty much exactly what she says:Ī QUARTERSTAFF is an old weapon (and the answer) the STAFF we get from “workforce” – and the rest? Sometimes a “25%” is just a QUARTER. Our penultimate clue is from the author of Chambers Crossword Manual, Pasquale:Ģ0dExhausted, only 10% there at the end in capacity (6) Inside HIS, we get our “hostile takeovers”: HIJACKINGS. And since we’re told they share 25%, that something is not JACKKING but JACKING. What is that something? Well, we paraphrase “knave” for JACK and “top man” for KING. This time, we’re using the container device: “in his” tells us we’ll be putting something inside the letters HIS. In the remaining three examples, the reminder that the actual solver will already have some crossing letters applies double.įirst, here’s mathematical educationist Brendan:ġ1aKnave sharing 25% with top man in his hostile takeovers (10) It might be doing a job similar to but not the same as the above. It might indicate the letters PC, as listed in all good dictionaries. … and sometimes, it’s something elseĪ percent sign is a versatile little collection of marks. … we take the first four letters (“a little under 50%”) of ALLEGEDLY, then jumble them (“at fault”) for our airline, EL AL.ġ5aAs written, all the world is 80% male? (4)įirst, we decipher the theatrical reference (“all the world’s a stage”) and retain the first 80% of STAGE for STAG (“male”). When the mysterious Puck give us this …ġ9aAirline allegedly a little under 50% at fault (2,2) First, let’s have the top banana among devices. However we get there, we lop ITALY’s Y and stick the remainder on CAP for CAPITAL.Īnd setters, more often than not, use more than one of the devices we’ve been looking at in the same clue. We don’t have to work our way through 24 names: we might use crossing letters, we might imagine a country most of whose name might follow CAP to make a word – or we might work backwards by thinking of a CAP_ word which means “stock”. Next, we’ll take a five-letter country name down to four. So here’s Picaroon (a novelist among other things):ġ7dBetter country with 20% less stock (7)īefore any chopping, we swap “better” for a synonym (CAP). But it’s not always that simple …Īdding or removing the x% may not give us the whole answer. We take “salaries”, replace it with a word we happen to have mentioned in the previous clues (WAGES) and lose 20% for AGES (“a long time”). Here’s Qaos, who’s a mathematician and quite fond of a “%” in a clue:Ģ5dFor a long time, salaries drop 20% (4) In fact, if it might look insultingly easy to give us the word we’re to chop, we might get another that means the same thing. This time, we remove the first halves of YOUR and WAGE, leaving UR + GE: URGE (“strongly recommend”). Here’s sometime academic and bookseller Arachne:ġ1dStrongly recommend 50% reduction in your wage (4) Is it always to be the first half of some word? It is not. Philistine hopes we will take the first halves of the words “Take pies or cake”, giving us TA + PI + O + CA: TAPIOCA, defined by the rest of the clue (“starch”). ![]() Here’s an example, from heart surgeon and crossword compiler Philistine:Ģ4aTake pies or cake – all 50% starch (7) Sometimes, setters are considerate enough to tell you precisely how much to chop. Solving crosswords entails a lot of finding words and chopping them up.
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