Tim Moorey - The Times How to Crack Cryptic Crosswords

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An updated edition from expert crossword setter and experienced tutor, Tim Moorey, including 24 brand-new annotated practice crosswords.Cryptic crosswords are no longer the preserve of the elite: in this easy-to-use guide, Tim demonstrates that anyone who enjoys words and word play can learn to solve a cryptic crossword clue.With clear pictorially presented explanations for many clues, you can revel in the deep satisfaction that comes from finishing cryptic crossword puzzles.Designed to apply to the solving of any cryptic crossword, this book develops and expands Tim’s first book, How to Master The Times Crossword, and is designed to guide the cryptic crossword beginner to an enriched solving experience.• 24 clearly annotated practice puzzles from different newspaper and magazine sources• Many new hints and tips to help every solver• Greatly expanded lists e.g. of those all-important abbreviations you should know• 10 top tips from a champion solver on how to tackle a typical daily cryptic• Up-to-date sections on the latest help available online eg smartphone and tablet apps• In-depth and clear explanations of every clue and puzzle answer• Suitable for children as an introduction to cryptics

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Commonwealth countries such as Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, Malaysia, Singapore, Kenya, Malta and South Africa have daily cryptics similar to British ones, as does Ireland. US crosswords are different in that grids are more open and clues are mildly cryptic or straightforward definitions. There are some occasional British-style puzzles in the New York Times and elsewhere. Nonetheless the UK can be considered the home of cryptics. For example, Daily Telegraph crosswords are syndicated to around 20 countries.

CROSSWORDS BETTER THAN SEX: DAILY MAIL ONLINE

When a cryptic crossword is solved, the brain releases dopamine, a chemical agent that makes sex, winning and eating more enjoyable.

2: Overview of Clues and Indicators

“The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.”

Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass

In this chapter I provide a short overview of the basics of clues and how to recognize them. Detailed points on each clue type are the subject of Chapter 3.

Characteristics of a cryptic clue

We will consider twelve types of cryptic clue, of which the majority conform to the principles contained in this image:

Cryptic clues (mostly) have two parts

Either the definition or the wordplay can come first in the clue sentence and - фото 2

Either the definition or the wordplay can come first in the clue sentence; and either could be exploited first to obtain the solution. Whichever does come second in your solving order acts as confirmation that you have the correct solution.

Taking each element in turn:

Definition: The definition can

take the form of a word, or words in a phrase

be an example of the solution (e.g. fruit can be defined as apple, perhaps)

be a (misleadingly expressed) synonym of the solution. To this end, definitions are often words that have more than one meaning

Wordplay: This is the way to elicit the solution if the definition does not do so. It can be seen as either:

the letters of the solution needing manipulation in one of several ways to provide another indication of the definition, or

individual word or words in the clue having to be interpreted in a different way from the surface meaning

Perhaps strictly accurately the terms should be wordand letterplay(though not, as an elderly student once stumbled over, “loveplay”!).

TOP TIP – DEFINITION PLACEMENT

Beginners find it much easier to decode a cryptic clue when they are told that the definitionis almost always either at the beginning or end of the clue sentence or phrase.

Solution: This can be one or more words whose word-length is shown at the end of the clue in parentheses (the enumeration).

An example of how this works is seen in this clue which has a simple juxtaposition of three parts from which the solver has to discover which parts are which before progress can be made. Here it could be that either find or above is the definition. In fact it is find .

Find record above (8)

Linkwords Few clues are as straightforward in construction as the previous - фото 3

Linkwords: Few clues are as straightforward in construction as the previous example and the first mild challenge is that there is often a linkword between the two parts to give the solution. The chart then is:

CRYPTIC CLUES WITH LINKING WORDS

Below is a clue which also starts with the definition but, in addition, has a linkword, one that is commonly used: from . The sense conveyed by from is that a synonym for church house can be formed from the two parts earlier and years (if the latter is taken as an abbreviation – more on this later).

Church house from earlier years (6)

Next is an example in which the definition is the final word in the clue and in which the linkword is in , the sense being that the wordplay is seen in the solution.

ADDITIVE CLUE: Keep wine in northern town (9)

As well as linkwords between definition and wordplay there can also be similar - фото 4

As well as linkwords between definition and wordplay, there can also be similar linkage within the wordplay to connect its different parts. Here it is and , a simple additive indication. The other linkword is indicates that the definition can be formed from the wordplay.

ADDITIVE CLUE: What babies need is sleep and food (7)

You will notice that the last two of the example clues are labelled additive - фото 5

You will notice that the last two of the example clues are labelled additive . In fact all so far have been of this type, a relatively plain construction of A + B = C which we shall consider later in more detail as one of the twelve clue types, dividing these into one group of eight and one group of four. Why split clues into two groups? Because some always contain the means of identifying their type (the first eight) and others virtually always do not (the remaining four). This distinction is amplified in the section which follows.

Indicators

At this point, beginners tend to say:

“Yes, I know that there are different types of clue but how on earth do I know which is which?”

The answer is as follows. For the first group of eightthere is always a signpost to the solution, called the indicator, within the clue sentence. Remember, an indicator is the means of identifying clue types. In Chapter 3we will consider the specific indicators for the first group of eight clue types. In the example the indicator is wrong , showing that this is an anagramclue. The concept behind this indicator is that the letters to be mixed are incorrect and must be changed to form the solution. There are many ways of giving the same anagram instruction to solvers, as you will also see in Chapter 3.

ANAGRAM CLUE: President saw nothing wrong (10)

For the remaining group of four its usually a case of informed guesswork - фото 6

For the remaining group of four, it’s usually a case of informed guesswork rather than indicators. This may seem unreasonable and impossible for the novice solver but I aim to prove that this is not really the case.

In the meantime, this may be a good time to point out that trial and error and/or inspired guesswork are part and parcel of good solving. This is reinforced by the clueing practice of all good setters whereby the clue type will nearly always become clear on working backwards from the solutions. Indeed, when a solver sees the solution the following day, he or she should only rarely be left thinking (as Ximenes put it):

“I thought of that but I couldn’t see how it could be right.”

We will now proceed to examine in detail all clue types and their indicators, with one and sometimes two examples of each type.

3: Clue Types and Indicators in Detail

“Give us a kind of clue.” W.S. Gilbert, Utopia Limited

Until Chapter 8, we’ll keep it simple with regard to clue types. In later chapters we will see that the clue types can and often do overlap, involving more than one sort of manipulation of letters or words within any one clue.

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