Across 1, 4. Penny is not, roughly speaking, the person of great purity - so beautify the already beautiful. (5,3,4) 11. Response to “stoke the woodstove” or preparing to use computer. (5) 12. Mistaken for headless German master – nothing new to you and me. (9) 13. I’m in turmoil. (3) 14. Drug swallowed with impish enjoyment to get a jellied food. (5) 15. Cinema to be shown in an intellectual manner. (8) 18. Insult can incapacitate. (7) 19. Monitor pedophile, partly to cause damage. (7) 21. Traditional drama, from the outset, never offers Homer. (3) 22. Couple with king sat about awkwardly, taking the most negative view. (2,5) 25. Flint arrowhead comes from fairy, at a guess. (3-4) 27. Do great things to start out in Scotland, and with heart – it’s in mouth! (8) 30. Linked verse made by Robert Aytoun, taking in Little England. (5) 32. Yes, in Fife, it’s said to be an organ. (3) 33. See 36 ac. 34. Neck parts from an indefinite number of primates. (5...
Posts
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Across 7. Treacherous person is employed by plumber with his strange, different way. (5-2-3-5) 9. Herb takes some risk to see mythical serpent. (8) 10. Extremely poor old boy. Unhappy soul! (6) 11. Hobbes’ sea serpent. (9) 13. Tree with a snake... (3) 15. …and a starting price for another snake. (3) 16. Monster with serpent’s tail has tea with me and an artist. (7) 18, 20 ac. Ethiopian prince goes after swan for snakes. (6) 21. Turn sour – or boo the serpent with foot in mouth. (9) 25. Pike of oriental length caught plant. (6) 26. A secret’s shared with a viper. (8) 27. Look - check legendary G-man ere Monday, and rest uneasily with mythical Scottish serpent. (4,4,7) Down 1. Repress tide after a point. (5) 2. Scattered Maori meal inside snow vehicle. (7) 3. Famous atoll or very little at all. (6) 4. Broken bone received in raid gone awry - but courteous. (8) 5. Good overhead surface of Scottish face. (5...
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
And the drawn winner for TVLPP 395 is … a first-time entrant!!! The name of Leslie Yonce of Richmond, Virginia was plucked from the Hat and we'll send off a Stephanie cartoon to you Leslie this weekend, although it will surely get delayed in the Christmas mail. Solvers from the USA include, from New Hampshire, Anne & Bruce Smith of Strafford, Randy Taylor, Julie Lindsay, Jim & Joanne Gray, and Larry Reynolds of Rochester, Chris Rogers of Farmington, and Barbara Bierweiler of Ossipee; solving duo Laura Bradford of Florida & Caroline Williams of Texas; Jay Miller of Pasadena, Calif.; Ta mara Brenner of Elmhurst, Ill.; Tom Wilson of So. Williamsport, Penn., and Rich Pardoe of Houston, Texas. Mark Roberts of Hostert, Luxembourg, Ian Simpson of Edinburgh, Scotland, and Calfan Dary from perennially toasty, but currently moist Anggabaya, Bali, were all in the solvers' Hat, together with, from England. Mark Nichols of Rugby, William Stewart of Leicester, Keith Williams of...
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Across 7. Planet with assumed name endlessly becomes December festival of revelry. (10) 9. Repents being Mediterranean shrubs. (4) 10. Fashionable fit of ill-humour as teens are upset and given to heavy drinking. (15) 11. Wise man has some imagination! (4) 12. Ye see yon birkie ca’d a lord, Wha struts, an’ stares, an’ a’ that, Tho’ hundreds worship at his word, He’s but a ---- for a’ that. - Robert Burns. (4) 13. Shelter with just a fork? Be wary. (5) 15. Repair minaret roof to create a great religious revolution. (11) 19, 18dn. Medieval festival has pleasurable abundance of pureed fruits and custards. (5,2,5) 21. This mischievous ruse often comes with a fee. (4) 22. Fish makes crazy shout when using a driver perhaps, or iron. (4) 24. Scottish equivalent of 8 dn. if a baboon’s fortune is mixed. (5,2,8) 25. Start some nasty idle talk to bring on fit of sulking. (4) 26. Drive from here with little suppo...
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
And the winner is … The drawn for TVLPP394 from a score of correct entries is lucky Barbara Bierweiler way up in Ossipee, NH, whose name was plucked from the hat a mere 13 months ago. Perhaps it is fate’s compensation for enduring long months of snow, although this year, the British solvers are probably worse off. We will get a cartoon in the mail to you, Barbara, maybe as early as tomorrow. Other solvers of this crossword included, from England, Derek Harrison of Pegswood, Nigel Crowley Cooksbridge, East Sussex, Mark Nichols of Rugby, William Stewart of Leicester, Chris Chatwin of Kenilworth, and Keith Williams of Kings Worthy. Then there is snow-dusted Ian Simpson of Edinburgh, Scotland and Calfan Dary, from where the snow never falls, in Anggabaya, Bali. Solvers from the USA include Laura Bradford (flying solo this month), Rich Pardoe of Houston, Texas, Tom Wilson of So. Williamsport, Penn., Jay Miller of Pasadena, Calif. (where votes are still be...