Quizzes & Puzzles41 mins ago
Listener No 4424: Fieldwork By Ferret
20 Answers
I was a bit later than usual getting started (shopping -- AARGH!) so was glad to find a reasonably straightforward puzzle from Ferret. Thank you, that was fun.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I agree that this was great fun. For once I hit on the theme quite quickly so was able to enjoy Ferret's excellent treatment of it and deal with the neat and unambiguous endgame. This probably will be too easy for some, but defo not for me.
FWIW, I think Ruthrobin's post is the loveliest appreciation of a Listener puzzle I have seen for a long time.
FWIW, I think Ruthrobin's post is the loveliest appreciation of a Listener puzzle I have seen for a long time.
Probably one of the easiest puzzles this year, but I don't agree with Aloysius535 that it's too easy. As the Listener Notes for Setters make clear, the essence of a good Listener is elegance, not difficulty per se, and this puzzle is elegant in a number of ways, not least in the clueing (and 14a was far from easy).
I thought I was going to take ages coming up with the phrase since a multitude of possibilities suggested themselves, but a close look at the grid after a meal revealed the solution.
I thought I was going to take ages coming up with the phrase since a multitude of possibilities suggested themselves, but a close look at the grid after a meal revealed the solution.
It's all been said. Although it didn't take long to solve, that was entirely beside the point, as there was so much to admire and enjoy. It's always very satisfying when the answers that have to be modified end up as real words. This was one of those puzzles that leave you thinking, 'All's well with the world after all'.
For the first time ever I have completed two Times Listeners in a row and thought 4424 Fieldwork was most enjoyable. More importantly it was just the right level. I recognise that I am firmly in the second or third division and would request the following: first that setters make the clues fairly straightforwardly cryptic (about the level of AZED); secondly that the first division solvers hide their occasional contempt about us mere mortals. It is not very nice, after you have struggled for several days and often failed, to read a post that says it was a bore. It s a bit like those dreadful Christmas letters where the sender chooses to draw the world’s attention to the cleverness of his family members.
But thank you Ferret from this solver in an agricultural area. I couldn’t understand how the definition to 14 across produced the answer. Is there meaning to Buff I couldn’t find?
But thank you Ferret from this solver in an agricultural area. I couldn’t understand how the definition to 14 across produced the answer. Is there meaning to Buff I couldn’t find?
The Listener crossword aims to be on average the most difficult of the crosswords published in the papers. The level of difficulty will vary but most weeks clues are likely to be difficult.
A lot of the contibutors here are expert. Some are setters themselves. In general they are looking for a challenge. Having said that we do sometimes seem rather smug,
To do the Listener you really need access to the Chambers Dictionary, the Big Red Book, BRB. On this site we try not to give anything away (another bone of contention with some) but if you think of what, say, a computer buff is that might lead you to the answer.
Finally, if the normal pattern applies, this week's puzzle will be numerical.
A lot of the contibutors here are expert. Some are setters themselves. In general they are looking for a challenge. Having said that we do sometimes seem rather smug,
To do the Listener you really need access to the Chambers Dictionary, the Big Red Book, BRB. On this site we try not to give anything away (another bone of contention with some) but if you think of what, say, a computer buff is that might lead you to the answer.
Finally, if the normal pattern applies, this week's puzzle will be numerical.
fyellin, I see what you're objecting to, I think, although I hadn't thought of it prior to reading your post. Word Y (or forms of it) is used fairly commonly in clues to indicate a different kind of modification. But the modification used here conforms to its meaning in Chambers, so I think it's OK.
Now that the answer is out. My concern was that to me, rotation means that word "ABCDE" becomes "BCDEA" or "EABCD". I'm not sure that I've seen "rotation" mean "reversal", but maybe I just wasn't paying attention.
I also flirted with the idea of "crop circle", but rejected it for the reasons given by the setter in his setter's blog: "apply circle to answer" doesn't really parse, and the word "fallow" hints at crop rotation.
I also flirted with the idea of "crop circle", but rejected it for the reasons given by the setter in his setter's blog: "apply circle to answer" doesn't really parse, and the word "fallow" hints at crop rotation.
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