This cryptic crossword is ridiculously difficult!
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- čas přidán 3. 09. 2019
- Tackling the hardest cryptic clues (and answers) that appear anywhere - the Times's Monthly Club Special crossword for August
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Hi! We're Simon Anthony and Mark Goodliffe, two of the UK's most enthusiastic puzzle solvers. We have both represented the UK at the World Sudoku Championships and the World Puzzle Championships. We're also "cryptic crossword" aficionados. Mark is the eleven-time winner of The Times championship and Simon is the former record holder for most consecutive correct solutions to The Listener crossword. We hope we can help your puzzle solving while also introducing you to some of the world's best puzzles.
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Simon and Mark
I wouldn't mind this becoming a monthly series!
A grid full of words I have never heard of, let alone used in conversation. Have spent a pleasant hour looking them all up.
I shouldn't laugh, but I couldn't help it at HUMP THE DUMPY.
Bonkers level of difficulty! Great to watch and Mark's dry humour made me chuckle (especially "hump the dumpy, what the hell does that mean?!")
Didn’t know if “light carriage” was C for the speed of light.
And Huxley second novel Antic Hay
Anti would be opposed, so removing that from the title you get chay...a light-weight carriage, a variation of chaise. A chair on wheels it would seem.
Bertillonage was an identification technique ("forensic anthropometry") that was displaced by fingerprinting.
I’m really bad at cryptics but I’ve watched this channel for a while and I’m really proud that I was able to get 10d.
Excellent, could I suggest it becomes a regular monthly event
I watched the whole video knowing the Flaubert novel off the top of my head - you could have made much better progress if you had it at the outset. I also remember the Bertillon measurements, that preceded fingerprints in law enforcement. I still wouldn't have finished.
Huxley's second novel is "Antic Hay", or if you like ANTI-CHAY. Not a great clue, given the dodgy spacing.
Spacing can always be deceptive. It's just a nun stated rule.
27a seems to be a reference to "Antic Hay," anti-chay, but even with that, I *still* don't quite grok the clue.
It's opposed by Antic Hay, so it's Anti-Antic Hay, or Anti-Anti chay, so just chay.
Have you tried the Saga Magazine crossword, gentlemen? Listener vocabulary in a badly constructed blocked grid ... and pretty decent clue writing. I consider it the hardest non-barred puzzle around, but I'm not a Times subscriber.
7D. The compiler was having a good chuckle at that one, wasn't he? Or she?
Rump Fed!
i know russian style fighting sometimes could be Sambo, no clue on the novel though
not only did i not understand one of the clues but I have never seen any of the answers!
Antic Hay
That's not difficult at all, I use all those words every jippi-jappy day
I mean I'm not a native speaker, but you seriously make me doubt my english skills. :(
Pretty much no-one knows or uses these words, and certainly you would never hear them in everyday, or even educated, conversation.