
RHESUS : A short form of a word meaning bringing back to life contains H(ospital). PALACE : Location or site contains A(rea).Ģd Macaque needs bringing back to life outside hospital (6) SANITISED : An anagram (ground) of IS STAINED.Ģ5a 500 on steamship wear formal clothes (5)ĭRESS : The Roman numeral 500, then the two letter ‘on’ or regarding, and the abbreviation for steamship.Ģ6a Swear as dance party beginning to end? (4)ĪVER : A wild party that might include dancing has its first letter moved to the end.Ģ7a Entertainment centre just by stadium (10)įAIRGROUND : Just or equitable, then stadium or sportsfield.ġd Area within location for splendid residence (6) RADIANT : The name of crosswordland’s favourite princess without the last letter, is enclosed by the animal used as a metaphor for a traitor.Ģ3a Fuss about vocab omitting British fruit (7)ĪVOCADO : A three letter fuss surrounds the word vocab once B(ritish) has been removed.Ģ4a Ground is stained, so decontaminated (9) ( A clever clue which we found tricky to hint.)Ģ1a Beaming princess almost taken in by traitor (7) MOVABLE FEAST : The answer can either describe Pancake Day as part of a religious festival, or a Pancake Day hamper. RENDITION : The first letter of read, then a publication or issue includes N(ew).ġ2a Savoury cake politician dipped in salt pot (7)ĬRUMPET : A fancy name for a table salt container surrounds a Member of Parliament.ġ3a Deathless seabird observed in wild lea (7)ĮTERNAL : A type of seabird is enclosed by an anagram (wild) of LEA.ġ4a Chair covering - not for mum? - Charlie carried in vehicle (12)ĪNTIMACASSAR : A four letter prefix meaning ‘against’ (not for), then an alternative shorter version of mum, next a charlie or nincompoop is surrounded by an automobile.ġ8a For example Pancake Day hamper? (7,5) LIEGE : An untruth (pork pie) and the first and last letters of Grenache.ġ1a Start to read publication that includes new version (9) PERISHABLE : An all-in-one clue with the wordplay being an anagram (deteriorates) of HELP AS BRIE.ĭUEL : Owed or needing to be paid, then the abbreviation for pound as money.ġ0a Pork pie and case of Grenache for lord (5) Please leave a comment telling us how you got on.ġa Help as Brie deteriorates - being this? (10) We’ll save our guess until our early morning comment tomorrow. We note that today’s Toughie setter is Logman (aka Jay) so we can be pretty sure that this one is by someone else. We saw so many duckling families on our walk this morning that we stopped counting them. We are having a great spell of fine, warm weather with clear, blue skies and gentle sea breezes. We’re almost prepared to believe that our summer is not far away now. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).Daily Telegraph Cryptic No 29829 Hints and tips by 2KiwisīD Rating – Difficulty *** – Enjoyment **** The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total. This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. Harris” as a “choice cut”, finding nothing else to say about it. The Independent's Andy Gill highly recommended the album, concluding that “it’s the tension between Mann’s disarmingly direct, conversational lyric style and the complexity of her musical design that gives Whatever its peculiar charge.” On the other hand, Robert Christgau only cited “Mr. Rolling Stone cited her music as “sunny, surreal melodies” with “razor-sharp lyrics”. The Los Angeles Times reflected this by saying she “mixes words like a master, catching lifetimes of ache and Angst” in her songs while the Chicago Tribune compared her to Elvis Costello. Most praised her sense of melody and the wordplay of her lyrics, exemplified by Entertainment Weekly in “hooky songs” and “evocative lyrics”. Whatever received mostly positive reviews from critics. It has also been included in the 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die list. The album, with special note for the song “4th of July”, was included by Elvis Costello in his “Costello’s 500” list for Vanity Fair. “I’ve Had It” is one of the songs featured in Nick Hornby’s book 31 Songs. Whatever is the first solo album by the American singer-songwriter Aimee Mann, released in 1993. Random information on the term ” Whatever”:
