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Listener 4083: Not as Mad as It Sounds? by Bandmaster
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At first the high proportion of short words is a bit daunting - but for the most part the clues are fair, even if in one instance a little vulgarity (in my and Chambers' opinion) creeps in. A good enjoyable solve with a pleasing conclusion which probably excuses (and made necessary) all those short clues. I liked the coinage too. Thanks and appreciation to Bandmaster.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Got to the end of this one quite quickly but completely failed on the last clash - knew roughly where it would be; checked all answers; then had a 'doh' moment. It couldn't be defined as anything as classy as a pdm! Despite all that, enjoyed the puzzle as it had plenty to keep both halves of the Jogler team busy.
Finished the grid on Sunday but am defeated by the very final step (often the case). I guess that I'm getting too old for lateral thinking.
This is yet another puzzle that has seen me asking Amazon to send me a previously unknown work of art - the first was Tallis' "Spem In Alium"
Some very tricky clues and none the less enjoyable for that. Surely the vulgarity is only of the rather mild variety?
This is yet another puzzle that has seen me asking Amazon to send me a previously unknown work of art - the first was Tallis' "Spem In Alium"
Some very tricky clues and none the less enjoyable for that. Surely the vulgarity is only of the rather mild variety?
For BobbyCollins: Indeed the vulgarity is mild, which is why Chambers calls it vulgar and not obscene or taboo! I was intrigued to see the American version uncovered here - not one I knew.
Tim Moorey gets quite a lot past the censor, with variations on elbow cropping up a fair bit. Curiously, here elbow gets past the censor, but the American a*s doesn't, even when it just means donkey.
And I still haven't worked out that tots clue!
Tim Moorey gets quite a lot past the censor, with variations on elbow cropping up a fair bit. Curiously, here elbow gets past the censor, but the American a*s doesn't, even when it just means donkey.
And I still haven't worked out that tots clue!
I made a late start to this and for a while I thought it would be my first non-finish of the year. I had the American and the quotation but I was missing about four or five grid entries (sort of in the two o'clock area). Got them eventually and the ending was neat and made me smile. I can get on with looking for an avatar now! Thanks Bandmaster.
Having neatly filled in my grid in it occurs to me that the 'broadly similar effect' in the preamble refers to the fact that the majority of the altered answers in the final grid are in the same direction.
Zabadak, your mention of donkeys etc - there was a complaining leter to the Times a couple of years back from someone who, not knowing the word onager, googled a Times2crossword clue "wild Asian ass" and was upset by the results.
Zabadak, your mention of donkeys etc - there was a complaining leter to the Times a couple of years back from someone who, not knowing the word onager, googled a Times2crossword clue "wild Asian ass" and was upset by the results.
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