I’ve seen this particular radio station a couple of times in crosswords earlier this year. But part of the fun (for me at least) is to work out how A could possibly mean B, or to nit-pick about inexact usage. Everyman crossword No. Obscure and little else. Unless it is in a Rupert Murdoch paper as I cannot have him or his ghastly news company in the house.
No? How on earth you're meant to know you're looking for an author's surname from that clue utterly defeats me. It took me a while to get going on this puzzle, and at one point I thought I might give up without finishing. The Crossword Solver is designed to help users to find the missing answers to their crossword puzzles. Away from Auckland this weekend so had to do this one online – used the “check” feature several times which shouldn’t be necessary with a cryptic., but that reflects the obscurity already commented on.
Obbo Everyman 3805. chokkie | 14:23 Sun 15th Sep 2019 | Crosswords.
Now I look forward to Sunday mornings and the latest entry in this blog. Dunno (3,5,1,4), That ill-sorted muddle suggests things are tricky to anticipate (3,4,2,4), Broad baby's complaint about knitted hat (8), Scrambled egg containing coddled roe I will serve king (6,1), French cat finds French drink where French drink is produced (7), Silver not returning to far-off island state (5). Another pleasing and tractable Sunday puzzle from Everyman, with the usual trademark clues. I liked the two long ones, NIMES, and TIN-POT. N (new) + EU + TR[i]AL (test), ignoring I[reland]. The composer. UP (in a happy mood) + anagram (unfortunately) of SIR MAN. However, I couldn't get anything if it is a seven letter word so am going with the (4,3) option but, to be honest, still have no idea how the first word is parsed, assuming I have it correct. I struggled with many of the same clues mentioned in both the Everyman threads. Thanks to setters and solvers who share. I would have replied sooner but for some reason I've had trouble logging on to the Forum today. (As Billy Joel famously sang). I have ..N I...R, def. Term for. One of a number of awful clues this week, I reckon. This site uses cookies. Sara says: September 22, 2019 at 10:16 am . Somewhat confusing because there’s a trade union in the UK called UNISON.
Everyman crossword … Hope this doesn't man we're heading back to the dark days of January with this setter. I am reluctant to give up on what was a Sunday morning pleasure but the pleasure is becoming quite limited. Maybe we should hold a referendum (or two) on the issue? Slang term for inferior or not to be taken seriously. © 2020 Crossword Clue Solver.
All Rights Reserved.Crossword Clue Solver is operated and owned by Ash Young at Evoluted Web Design. I enjoy the puzzling and the clue relationships.
I fully agree with most of what Brendan says in post 1.
Thanks everyone for your replies and comments, I always enjoy reading the views of others and seeing how they compare with my own. Print | PDF version | Accessible version.
No? How on earth you're meant to know you're looking for an author's surname from that clue utterly defeats me. It took me a while to get going on this puzzle, and at one point I thought I might give up without finishing. The Crossword Solver is designed to help users to find the missing answers to their crossword puzzles. Away from Auckland this weekend so had to do this one online – used the “check” feature several times which shouldn’t be necessary with a cryptic., but that reflects the obscurity already commented on.
Obbo Everyman 3805. chokkie | 14:23 Sun 15th Sep 2019 | Crosswords.
Now I look forward to Sunday mornings and the latest entry in this blog. Dunno (3,5,1,4), That ill-sorted muddle suggests things are tricky to anticipate (3,4,2,4), Broad baby's complaint about knitted hat (8), Scrambled egg containing coddled roe I will serve king (6,1), French cat finds French drink where French drink is produced (7), Silver not returning to far-off island state (5). Another pleasing and tractable Sunday puzzle from Everyman, with the usual trademark clues. I liked the two long ones, NIMES, and TIN-POT. N (new) + EU + TR[i]AL (test), ignoring I[reland]. The composer. UP (in a happy mood) + anagram (unfortunately) of SIR MAN. However, I couldn't get anything if it is a seven letter word so am going with the (4,3) option but, to be honest, still have no idea how the first word is parsed, assuming I have it correct. I struggled with many of the same clues mentioned in both the Everyman threads. Thanks to setters and solvers who share. I would have replied sooner but for some reason I've had trouble logging on to the Forum today. (As Billy Joel famously sang). I have ..N I...R, def. Term for. One of a number of awful clues this week, I reckon. This site uses cookies. Sara says: September 22, 2019 at 10:16 am . Somewhat confusing because there’s a trade union in the UK called UNISON.
Everyman crossword … Hope this doesn't man we're heading back to the dark days of January with this setter. I am reluctant to give up on what was a Sunday morning pleasure but the pleasure is becoming quite limited. Maybe we should hold a referendum (or two) on the issue? Slang term for inferior or not to be taken seriously. © 2020 Crossword Clue Solver.
All Rights Reserved.Crossword Clue Solver is operated and owned by Ash Young at Evoluted Web Design. I enjoy the puzzling and the clue relationships.
I fully agree with most of what Brendan says in post 1.
Thanks everyone for your replies and comments, I always enjoy reading the views of others and seeing how they compare with my own. Print | PDF version | Accessible version.