Cryptic crossword
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Cryptic crosswords are a particular type of crossword which have become widely popular in the UK, and several other Commonwealth nations such as Australia, New Zealand , Canada and India. They are also popular in Israel in a Hebrew form. Each individual clue is a word puzzle in and of itself (often involving anagrams).
- 1 Popularity
- 2 How cryptic clues work
- 3 Regional variation
- 4 Types of clue
- 4.1 Pure cryptic
- 4.2 Double definition
- 4.3 Hidden words
- 4.4 Reversals
- 4.5 Hidden backwards
- 4.6 \"Charade\" clues
- 4.7 Containers
- 4.8 Anagrams
- 4.9 Homophones
- 4.10 Deletions
- 4.11 Combination clues
- 4.12 \"& lit.\"
- 5 Abbreviations in clues
- 6 Ximenean clues
- 7 Compilers
- 7.1 ''The Times''
- 7.2 ''The Sunday Times''
- 7.3 ''The Guardian''
- 7.4 ''The Independent''
- 7.5 ''The Financial Times''
- 7.6 ''New York Magazine''
- 7.7 ''The Atlantic Monthly'' (available only online)
- 7.8 ''The Nation''
- 7.9 ''Harper's''
- 7.10 ''The Toronto Star''
- 7.11 ''The Ottawa Citizen''
- 7.12 ''The Globe and Mail''
- 7.13 ''Games Magazine''
- 7.14 ''Private Eye''
- 7.15 ''The Daily Telegraph''
- 8 Further reading
- 9 See also
- 10 External links
Popularity
All the major national newspapers in the UK carry both cryptic and concise (quick) crosswords. Of these, the cryptic crossword in The Times is particularly noted for its difficulty, while that in The Guardian is well-loved for its subtlety, humour and quirkiness.Cryptic crosswords are uncommon in U.S. publications, though they can be found occasionally in the New York Times, in the British-based Financial Times and in magazines such as The Nation and Harper's. Other sources of cryptic crosswords (at all difficulty levels) are puzzle books, Canadian newspapers such as the Toronto Star and GAMES Magazine.
How cryptic clues work
In essence, a cryptic clue describes its answer accurately but only when the clue is read in a very devious way. What the clue appears to say when read normally (the surface reading) is almost never anything to do with the answer and is there as a distraction. The challenge is to find a way of reading the clue that leads to the solution.In a typical clue, the answer is described in two ways, either of which can come first. One half of the clue is a definition, which must exactly match the part of speech and tense as the answer. The second half (the subsidiary indication) describes the answer in terms of wordplay. (The subsidiary indication can be a second definition in the case of double definition clues.) One of the tasks of the solver is to work out where this boundary occurs and insert a mental pause there when reading the clue cryptically. (Sometimes the two parts are joined with a link word or phrase.)
Because a typical cryptic clue describes its answer in detail and often more than once, the solver can usually have a great deal of confidence in the answer once it has been determined. This is in contrast to non-cryptic crossword clues which often have several possible answers and force the solver to use the crossing letters to distinguish which was intended.
Here is an example (taken from The Guardian crossword of Aug 6 2002, set by "Shed"):
- 15D: Very sad unfinished story about rising smoke (8)
- 15D: indicates location and direction (down) of clue in grid
- "Very sad" is the definition.
- "Unfinished story" gives "Tal" ("tale" with one letter missing, ie "unfinished")
- "rising smoke" gives "ragic" (a "cigar" is a smoke and this is a down clue and so "rising" indicates that "cigar" should be written going up the page i.e. backwards)
- "about" means that the letters of "tal" should be put either side of "ragic", giving "tragical"
- "(8)" says that the answer is a single word of eight letters.
Regional variation
There are notable differences between British and North American (including Canadian) cryptics. American cryptics are thought of as holding to a more rigid set of construction rules than British ones, which may be either praised or vilified depending on which side of the Atlantic a solver is from. American cryptics usually require all words in a clue to be used in service of the wordplay or definition, whereas British ones allow for more extraneous or supporting words.Compilers or setters (or cruciverbalists as many term themselves) often use slang terms and abbreviations, generally without indication, so familiarity with these can be useful. Also words that can mean more than one thing are common, often the meaning the solver must use is completely different to the one it appears to have in the clue. Some examples are:
- Bloomer - often means flower (a thing that blooms).
- Flower - often means river (a thing that flows).
- Lead - could be the metal, or the verb.
- Novel - could be a book, or a word for new, or a code-word indicating an anagram.
- Permit - could be a noun (meaning licence) or a verb (meaning allow).
Types of clue
Pure cryptic
The original cryptic clue, more commonly known as a double entendre or cryptic definition. Clues of this sort appeared in "straight" crosswords before cryptic crosswords existed. Here the clue appears to say one thing, but with a slight shift of viewpoint it says another. For example:
- A word of praise? (8)
Another one might be:
- The flower of London? (6)
This type of clue rarely appears in American cryptics, but is common in British and Canadian cryptics.
Double definition
A clue may, rather than having a definition part and a wordplay part, have two definition parts. Thus
- Not seeing window covering (5)
- Eastern European buff (6)
These clues tend to be short; in particular, two-word clues are almost always double definition clues.
Hidden words
This is when the answer appears in the clue, but it is hidden within one or more words. For example:
- Found ermine, deer hides damaged (10)
Possible indicators of a hidden clue are "in part", "partially", "in", "within", "hides", "conceals", "some", and "held by".
Another example:
- Introduction to do-gooder canine (3)
Reversals
A word that gets turned around to make another is a reversal. For example:
- Returned beer fit for a king (5)
Other indicator words include "receding", "in the mirror", "going the wrong way", "to the left" or "left" (for across clues), and "rising", "overturned" or "mounted" (for down clues).
Hidden backwards
Sometimes the above two clue types are combined. A word may be hidden backwards, such as in the clue:
- Cruel to turn part of internet torrid (6)
\"Charade\" clues
Here the answer is formed by joining individually clued words to make a larger word (namely, the answer).For example:
- Outlaw leader managing money (7)
Containers
A container clue puts one set of letters inside another. So:
- Perfume cloth seen in European nation (9)
Other container indicators are "around," "clutching," "enters," and the like.
Anagrams
An anagram is a rearrangement of a certain section of the clue to form the answer. This is usually indicated by words such as 'strange', 'bizarre', 'muddled', 'wild', 'drunk', or any other term indicating change. One example might be:
- Chaperone shredded corset (6)
Anagram clues are characterized by an indicator word adjacent to a phrase that has the same number of letters as the answer. The indicator tells the solver that there is an anagram they need to solve in order to work out the answer. Indicators come either before or after the letters to be anagrammed. In an American cryptic, only the words given in the clue may be anagrammed; in some older puzzles, the words to be anagrammed may be clued and then anagrammed. So in this clue:
- Chew honeydew fruit (5)
Other possible anagram indicators, among the thousands possible: abstract, absurd, alien, alternative, awkward, bad, barmy, blend, break, careless, chaotic, clumsy, contrived, convert, corrupt, develop, doctor, eccentric, fabricate, fake, fix, fudge, ground, hammer, hybrid, jostle, knead, loose, maybe, messy, mutant, new, novel, odd, order, outrageous, peculiar, poor, questionable, remodel, resort, rough, sort, style, troubled, twist, unconventional, unsound, vary.
Homophones
Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, such as "night" and "knight". Homophone clues always have an indicator word or phrase that has to do with phonetics, such as "reportedly", "they say", "vocal", "to the audience", and "is heard".An example of a homophone clue is
- We hear twins shave (4)
If the words are the same length, the homophone indicator is always adjacent to the word that is not the answer; therefore, in the previous example, "we hear" was adjacent to "twins" and the answer was pare rather than pair. The indicator could come between the words if they were of different lengths and the enumeration was given, such as in the case of "right" and "rite".
Deletions
Deletions consist of beheadments, curtailments, and internal deletions. In beheadments, a word loses its first letter. In curtailments, it loses its last letter, and internal deletions remove an inner letter, such as the middle one.An example of a beheadment:
- Beheaded celebrity is sailor (3)
Other indicator words of beheadment include "don't start", "topless", and "after the first".
An example of curtailment:
- Shout, "Read!" endlessly (3)
Other indicators include "nearly" and "unfinished".
An example of internal deletion:
- Challenging sweetheart heartlessly (6)
Combination clues
A clue may employ more than one method of wordplay. For example:
- Illustrious baron returns in pit (9)
\"& lit.\"
A rare clue type is the "& lit." clue, standing for "and literally so". In this case, both the wordplay and the definition halves are the same. In some publications this is always indicated by an exclamation point at the end of the clue. For example:
- God incarnate, essentially! (4)
Abbreviations in clues
Abbreviations are popular with crossword compilers for clueing individual letters or short sections of the answer.
Consider the following clue:
- About to come between little Desmond and worker for discourse (7)
Compilers make use of a large number of these crossword abbreviations.
Ximenean clues
The compiler Ximenes drew up rules for cryptic crossword clues, designed to give clues of a good standard that are fair to the solver.
Compilers
In Britain it is traditional -- dating from the crossword pioneer Edward (Bill) Powys Mathers (1892-1939), who called himself Torquemada in honour of the great inquisitor -- for compilers to use a single evocative pseudonym. One of them, who worked under the name Crispa before she retired in 2004, actually changed her legal name to Ruth Crisp to correspond.The Times
Adrian Bell was the first to set The Times Crossword from 1930 and was one of those responsible for establishing its distinctive cryptic style. The Times came late to the crossword party - most other national papers already had one by 1930 - the Telegraph started in 1925, for instance.Nowadays, the Times has a team of regular setters, many of whom set puzzles for other papers.
The Sunday Times
The main compiler for The Sunday Times is Barbara Hall (who also compiles the simpler dictionary crossword) and has been Puzzles Editor for nearly thirty years. The beneficial effect of crosswords' mental stimulation can be seen from Barbara's record - her first crossword was published in 1937 and she is still going strong after nearly seventy years of compilating. The Sunday Times is also home to the fiendish Mephisto puzzle set for the last 10 years by Chris Feetenby, Mike Laws and Tim MooreyThe Guardian
The Guardian newspaper features cryptic crosswords set by the following compilers, among others.- Araucaria
- Brummie
- Bunthorne
- Chifonie
- Enigmatist
- Janus
- Paul
- Quantum
- Rufus
- Shed
The Independent
- Quixote
- Dac
- Merlin
- Phi
- Virgilius
- Empire
- Nimrod
- Mass
- Eimi
- Math
- Glow-worm
- Tees
- Obtrox
The Financial Times
- Falcon
- Cinephile (see Araucaria)
- Crux
- Dante (another pseudonym for Rufus)
New York Magazine
The Atlantic Monthly (available only online)
The Nation
- Frank W. Lewis
Harper's
- Richard E. Maltby Jr.
The Toronto Star
- Caroline Andrews
The Ottawa Citizen
- Susannah Sears
The Globe and Mail
- Fraser Simpson
- Roger Squires (cryptics) uses Rufus, Dante, Hodge in UK
Games Magazine
- Patrick Berry
- Mike Selinker
- Bob Stigger
- Ron Sweet
Private Eye
In the early 1970s the satirical magazine's crossword was set by the Labour MP Tom Driberg, under the pseudonym of "Tiresias" (supposedly "a distinguished academic churchman"). It is currently set by Eddie James under the name "Cyclops". The crossword is frequently pornographic and, by all measures, usually intensely offensive. The prize for the first correct solution opened, £100, is unusually high for a crossword and attracts many entrants.The Daily Telegraph
- Roger Squires
- Ann Tait
- Jeremy Mutch
- Don Manley
- Peter Chamberlain
Further reading
Chambers Crossword Manual by Don Manley (3rd edition, Chambers 2001)
See also
External links
- [Cryptics Monthly]
- [The Crossword Centre]
- [A great British obsession] (article from The Guardian, extracted from a book by Sandy Balfour)
- [Description of cryptic crossword clues, guide to solving and examples]
- [Discussion of cryptic crossword clues (help, get help, discuss)]
- [The Times crossword team]
- [Ximenean clueing]
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