6. Idle talk concludes with nothing for a Nobelist, familiarly. (4)
10. Spread open in the Gospel, divinely. (5)
11. Odd tales from 6 ac.’s output. 4,5)
12. See 19 ac.
15. See 19 ac.
19, 15 ac., 27 dn., 12ac. Article: Groups of lower rank than family give over maze (with his intervention), from 6 ac. (3,7,2,3,9)
21. Organ stops land us (agitato) around Langley’s organization. (9)
22. See 1 ac.
23. “No,” says the Scot, who’s a bit of a banana eater, (3)
24. Statute based on custom shows ordinary Scottish hill. (6,3)
27. Turning icy hot and sly, like most fish jaws. (9)
29. Forms of both amnesia and composition. (5)
31. Saint with Burmese name and French fatty tissue. (4)
2. Supplement a bit of the weekend. (3)
3. Falling short yet coming up with colorful Greek letter. (5)
4. Name associated with both Thomas and Bob. (5)
5. Smallish person associated with Narcissus Boyd. (3)
7. A small hard growth has a mighty future. (5)
8. There’s no place like it, one hears, for a measure of resistance. (3)
9. This old instrument can make rats yelp! (8)
13. Peril of comics is a gem elsewhere. (5)
14. One may dig them in or kick them up. (5)
16. Plant with spur found in some typewriters. (5,5)
18. See 23 dn.
19. Nicaragua, under you French, displays a military jacket. (5)
20. It is sent with a drug to a man, so it’s said. (5)
23, 18 dn., 32 ac. Not a soul to sort it! We get confused with the officer from 6 ac. (2,3,6,2,3,7)
25. Acid type, from the start, makes us careful in chemistry. (5)
27. See 19 ac.
28. Fictional AI menace arises for sixth note. (3)
30. Contrivance made from juniper berries? (3)
E-mail
your solutions of The Very Logical Prize Puzzle No. 395 by the closing date of
4 p.m. (EST) on Friday, Dec. 20, 2024, to mailto:johnnolan755@gmail.com
and include your name, postal address and your choice of a Strip T’s shirt***,
should you be the drawn winner. Please include a second choice (design number
and size) just in case we are out of stock of your favorite T-shirt. The items
on Café Press are not in our stock and thus are not available as prizes.
Solutions
can also be mailed to John Nolan, 27 River Road, Farmington, NH, 03835.
Most
answers, except proper names, appear in Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary
tenth edition and/or The Chamber’s Dictionary. In this
"British-style" crossword, punctuation marks in clues are best
ignored, as a rule. The answers to 21 ac. and 27 ac. do not appear in
Chambers, but can be found elsewhere, including online. The 19 ac. clue is unavoidably
clunky.
The
solution to The Very Logical Prize Puzzle No. 395, along with the name of the
winner, and everyone else submitting correct solutions, will be published on
this site towards the end of December.
***P.S.
The cost of mailing one T-shirt overseas has quadrupled in recent years and is
now over $24 a pop, effectively killing the trade of small businesses like
Strip T’s. Thus, the prize now offered to winning puzzlers from outside the
U.S. (and within if preferred) will be a signed Stephanie cartoon rather than a
T-shirt.
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