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Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched - Crossword Clue

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Set by: Vlad

Cryptic crossword No 29,008

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  • 9 Be smarter than winner? What do you think? (3,4,2)
  • 10 Supply content for a French paper (5)
  • 11 Land fish — one is thrown back, having been caught (7)
  • 12 Harrow teacher cycling to Thailand (7)
  • 13 It's played in honour of leader (4)
  • 14 Henry staying in York location for free (2,3,5)
  • 15 No bother mostly cutting through concrete (7)
  • 17 Composer Zuckerberg's baby born in South Africa (7)
  • 19 Run, man, run! He may stop him (5,5)
  • 22 Wait for one tenor to join in (4)
  • 23 Duchess ultimately visits on and off — it's enough for duke (7)
  • 24 Drive truck back surrounded by monkeys (7)
  • 26 Revealed in touching way (5)
  • 27 Artist one criminal attacks violently (5,4)
  • 1 Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched (2-2-11)
  • 2 Workers with new party in impasse (5-3)
  • 3 Twice harbouring a prejudice (4)
  • 4 Small change affected her plans (8)
  • 5 Idiot in school's a pain (6)
  • 6 Don't know location of London Bridge? Head for market close to here (6,2)
  • 7 Game about having fancy man over desk (6)
  • 8 Unpredictable psychopaths are gathering round former drug dealer (11,4)
  • 16 Stole nuts from the bottom and left quickly (8)
  • 17 Playwright (female) at rock bottom after upset (8)
  • 18 At home in New York, perhaps (8)
  • 20 Paper that's made up of lies? (6)
  • 21 Recently let down, having left Delaware for love (2,4)
  • 25 Scary colleague in Shoreditch so psyched up (4)

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The Guardian Cryptic Crossword 29008 Answers

Let us give you a warm welcome to thank you for visiting our site. Find below all The Guardian Cryptic Crossword 29008 Answers . This is an extremely popular crossword puzzle in which for sure you will pass some great time and also keep your brain sharp with all the interesting crossword clues found on each day on The Guardian Cryptic Crossword puzzles. As you might see below are all the today’s The Guardian Cryptic Crossword Daily Puzzle questions. If you would like to find the answer then kindly click on any of the questions below.

Crossword Title: The Guardian Cryptic Crossword 29008 Answers

CLICK ON ANY OF THE QUESTIONS BELOW TO SHOW THE FULL ANSWER

  • Be smarter than winner? What do you think?
  • Supply content for a French paper
  • Land fish – one is thrown back, having been caught
  • Harrow teacher cycling to Thailand
  • It's played in honour of leader
  • Henry staying in York location for free
  • No bother mostly cutting through concrete
  • Composer Zuckerberg's baby born in South Africa
  • Run, man, run! He may stop him
  • Wait for one tenor to join in
  • Duchess ultimately visits on and off – it's enough for duke
  • Drive truck back surrounded by monkeys
  • Revealed in touching way
  • Artist one criminal attacks violently
  • Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched
  • Workers with new party in impasse
  • Twice harbouring a prejudice
  • Small change affected her plans
  • Idiot in school's a pain
  • Don't know location of London Bridge? Head for market close to here
  • Game about having fancy man over desk
  • Unpredictable psychopaths are gathering round former drug dealer
  • Stole nuts from the bottom and left quickly
  • At home in New York, perhaps
  • Paper that's made up of lies?
  • Recently let down, having left Delaware for love
  • Scary colleague in Shoreditch so psyched up

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The Guardian Cryptic Crossword 28304 Answers

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Fifteensquared

Never knowingly undersolved

Guardian Cryptic 29,008 by Vlad

A slow and steady solve for me – favourites 9ac, 19ac, 4dn, 6dn, and 25dn. Thanks to Vlad

81 thoughts on “Guardian Cryptic 29,008 by Vlad”

I thought this must be an easier Vlad than usual – I finished it in around an hour – which is unheard of for me (did of course have some help from aids – and a few are not parsed).

Much helped by getting 1d straightaway and quickly filling in the NW

Loved APOTHECARYS SHOP, and SEARCH ME made me smile/groan.

Also liked OUT WITH IT, ON THE HOUSE, FISTFUL, ROUTE, SHERIDAN, TISSUE – and POSH for the surface.

Thanks Vlad and manehi

Brilliant! Loved ASTATINE despite never having heard of it

Cheers V&M

Thank you manehi. Lucky you (not). This is such a minor thing but Do it yourselfers, never heard of. DIYERS maybe. Liked REFUSAL, but that’s probably because I didn’t see the bigger picture.

Tough but superb. Similar favourites to Fiona Anne @1. ASTATINE loi after staring AT it for eons. Thanks for parsing TORMENT and OF LATE.

Ta Vlad & manehi

I share Fiona Anne’s favourites and the unusual experience of almost sailing through a Vlad puzzle. I was only held up by ASTATINE, where I got fixated of composing something out of Staten Island. (An Island in Staten???)

Presumably Vlad is implying the wonderful Borough Market next to London Bridge in SEARCH ME. Brilliant clue.

Typical Vlad, tough but fair. 13a very elegant. Thanks both.

Great puzzle as usual from Vlad Thanks for parsing of SMETANA (SEARCH ME was no doddle to parse either)

Pretty much the same experience as everyone else. A good start to the day, so thanks to setter and blogger.

I could see that ASTATINE fitted, but had to wait a while for the teatray. EQUIP was obvious from the definition, but the name of a French newspaper seems too obscure. Otherwise, lots of fun. Thanks Vlad and manehi.

Nice to have ASTATINE rather than Arsenic for a change. Other favourites were REFUSAL and COVER DRIVE.

Tough but enjoyable. My favourites were SEARCH ME, TORMENT, APOTHECARY’S SHOP, FISTFUL, EXTRA COVER, SNAFFLED.

I did not parse 9ac, 10ac, 20d.

New for me: SHRAPNEL = small change; ASTATINE.

Thanks, both.

[AlanC@6 – I agree that Borough market is wonderful – I used to eat and shop there often]

Interesting and clever, but not a successful morning. I knew how EQUIP must work for a long time, but couldn’t remember L’Equipe. Failed to parse OBOE, ON THE HOUSE (I thought about on t’house as it’s Yorkshire…) Didn’t know enough about cricket to get EXTRA COVER, or enough about elements to spot ASTATINE. I just about identified UTE and SHRAPNEL, neither of which are in my usual vocabulary.

Brilliant puzzle!

As usual, manehi, I agree with all your favourites – but I had nearly three times as many ticks. To highlight a few: ASTATINE – because, for once, I spotted the device reasonably quickly ON THE HOUSE, FISTFUL and EXTRA COVER, for making me smile SHERIDAN, for ‘rock bottom’ OBOE, STAY and POSH – three little gems SEARCH ME, for its allusion to Borough Market – like Alan C and michelle, I love it! I could go on …

Huge thanks, thanks, as ever, to Vlad, for a super start to the day and to manehi for another fine blog.

(And, as if that were not enough, now for Rosa Klebb in the FT. 🙂 )

Apologies for the perhaps over-effusive ‘thanks’.

I thought of Borough Market, too and took a while to solve the search bit of SEARCH ME, with a clanging pdm. ASTATINE took longer than it should. Didn’t parse OF LATE or EQUIP as didn’t know L’Équipe. Agree with the tough but fair.

Thank you to Vlad and manehi.

Not much to other than that was brilliant. Couldn’t fathom how POSH worked, but couldn’t see what else would fit. Like all great clues, it’s obvious once you see it!

I agree that SEARCH ME was the stand-out clue. Such a smooth surface which then has to be read, counterintuitively, as “Don’t know / location of London / Bridge / Head for market / close to here”. I think it might make it into my personal hall of fame.

paddymelon @3, “do it yourselfer” is in Chambers.

Many thanks Vlad and manehi.

AlanC@6: SEARCH ME: Yes, great clue. And it had to be about Borough Market, Tim C@11: ASTATINE: Yes, it’s one of those clues where the capital A of “At” is hiding in plain sight by being first in the clue. Of late ?we’ve had Man Ray clued like this. The blogger missed it, but lots of us here spotted it. As you say, the same device can be used for Arsenic, with “As” .

Eileen@14 says it all! Excellent puzzle. And the Rosa Klebb in the FT is Brilliant, too! 🙂 Not forgetting Phi in the I.

If there’s anyone here who still doesn’t know, the FT’s Rosa Klebb is the Guardian’s Arachne. You can find the puzzle here https://www.ft.com/content/73f645d1-b3d2-408d-af6c-3c09e386926c … and yes, it is, unsurprisingly, brilliant.

These clues with elements appear periodically, as it were.

Petert@22 🙂

Remembered ute from a previous crossword. Loved APOTHECARYS SHOP, ASTATINE and FISTFUL ( that one came up in the special Maskarade at Christmas ).

Agree with the fan club for Borough Market – discovered romanesco there and experienced some trendy eating.

Have taken photos of and around the SMETANA statue in Prague and, in memory, I’m posting an earworm with the Ma Vlast melodic theme which comes to mind very easily

https://youtu.be/Sdx0WQ5SwpY

Not significantly to do with the crossword but it combines a few bits and pieces. David Elleray STAYed as a HARROW TEACHER ( POSH SCHool that ) for decades and decades. He also STAYed a Premier League referee for years, was often accused of BIAS, got into a FISTFUL of STAND-OFFS and TORMENTed the players with his penalty REFUSALs and LATE decisions.

Thank you Vlad and manehi.

I found this extremely tough. ASTATINE new to me but a quite brilliant clue, I think. And while I feel that cricketing references appear too frequently, EXTRA COVER was cleverer than most. Thanks, as usual.

Petert@22: I was thinking some evil setter might cross-reference all the two-letter words in Scrabble against the Periodic Table and produce clues beginning with say: “Be” for Beryllium. Beware of any clue like this.

A tough challenge as usual for Vlad – favourites were ASTATINE, ON THE HOUSE, and SHOP.

I did wonder whether there was a composer called SMETABA, but had never come across just N for ‘born’, and had never heard of the composer in any case.

I just checked the archives here and found this: Guardian Cryptic 27,498 by Qaos – May 2, 2018 – blogged coincidentally by manehi. Do you remember it? https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/cryptic/27498 I’ll say no more. Thanks Vlad and manehi

Excellent offering from Vlad, combining ingenious constructions with plausible and amusing surfaces.

Too many great clues to list, but this chemist has to admit shamefully that his LOI was the wonderful ASTATINE 🙂 (Arsenic and helium are the elements most often subjected to this device, but there are several other possibilities: Be, O, Al, In, I, Mo spring to mind, but others could be possible with a lift-and-separate – Co, for example).

Thanks to Jim and manehi

[I circle overhead, low down?]

APOTHECARYS SHOP was delightful, DO IT YOURSELFERS slightly less so (does anybody actually say “do it yourself”? DIY, surely?) but that’s just a quibblet. A lovely puzzle – and I now have the glorious Ma Vlast swimming around in my head.. Thanks Vlad & manehi

Gervase@29: As a chemist, you might find the puzzle @28 amusing. 🙂

[Better with the enumeration: I circle overhead, low down? (7)]

[one of a group of chemical elements that includes chlorine, fluorine, and iodine]

Great crossword! Thoroughly enjoyed it. Certainly not Vlad’s toughest challenge.

I agree with all the positive comments but I would add that I thought ROUTE was beautifully simple in its clue construction.

Gervase @29 I’m currently watching MOEEN ALI bowling – his name is (almost) made up of the elements you mentioned. Coincidence? Also not sure I’d have got EXTRA COVER if I hadn’t been watching the cricket at the time 🙂

[FrankieG @34: Yes, indeed – and a quick perusal of the Qaos puzzle shows that he used a lot of them – but more than one in a crossword rather gives the game away!]

A bit of a struggle to finish this with the RHS holding out the longest.

I got caught (again) by the At trick; it was nicely misleading in At home. I liked REFUSAL with the ‘no bother’, FISTFUL dukes and duchesses, STAND-OFF for the surface, and SEARCH ME for the clever extended definition.

Thanks Vlad and manehi.

Far too many unparsed, hopeful insertions that relied on spotting a possible definition within the clue to say I truly enjoyed the struggle today. Wondered about STAY for some while, then left with 4 crossers in place for 18d, a word I’d simply not come across before. Plaudits for the two long down anagrams of course, but this was a bridge too far – just…

A difficult solve, but a very rewarding impalement. LOI and maybe my favourite was ASTATINE. Finally A-level chemistry is of some use. Ute is one of those words that only ever seems to crop up in crosswords. I recall EXTRA COVER many years ago being clued as something like “Additional insurance for where careless drivers may be caught” which I enjoyed so much it’s stuck in my memory. SMETANA was a clever bloke; he knew which side his bride was bartered.

Thanks Eileen for the reference to Arachne. Miss her so much in the Grauni. Had no idea she was still setting. Will go and get the paper just to experience her brilliance! Pl someone (Hugh) get her back in our paper

Quizzy Bob @40 🙂 – thanks for happy memories of dancing in ‘The Battered Bride’, as we called it, at university https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_5UJo9Iy5Q

Cedric @41 – if you can’t use the link I gave, I think you’ll consider £3.50 (I’ve just looked it up) well spent.

Thanks manehi, i think your straight equivalence of Hit=winner beats my thought that a winner is an example (hence the ?) of a tennis stroke/hit, and I had confused myself over Bi = twice without the ‘s’, despite having seen Bis a few times. Echo all the plaudits for this. Amoeba@27 I did briefly think the same re 17A but then realised I had learned that composer recently – from Picaroon G29967 21st Jan in fact. While Borough Market is indeed a haven for foodies, 6d reminded me to add the Market Porter to the itinerary of my next trip to the great cesspit, thanks Vlad. And thanks Eileen for the ft tip!

Following Eileen@21 and 42, for anyone wanting a real Arachne binge, she sets in this week’s Spectator as well (as La Jerezana). It costs more than £3.50, but you do get more clues – plus the rest of the magazine (much of may not feel like an attraction for a regular Guardian reader, but it takes all sorts……And the Arts/Book reviews are often interesting and usually well-informed.)

Tough but fair. Proud of the ones I got and parsed, had a lot of help from Bradford for the rest. Favs similar to others except the element – I must try to remember these especially at the start of a clue. Thanks V and m

[Gervase@37: Yes, that was the verdict at the time. But I found it a fun solve and read the blog from 5 years ago.] Qaos himself said: “What would Sherlock make of today’s puzzle? Marmite!” minty quoted that week’s Only Connect Final which, coincidentally, also used the device: In low melting point alloys. As a poison. Be present in Emerald. He is very light. muffin posted a link to Tom Lehrer – The Elements – Live in Copenhagen in 1967: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcS3NOQnsQM The subtitles go a bit awry at about 1:28. – “…can rodeo McClure coca-cola”. DaveMc posted a clue that was never solved, because everybody had moved on to the next day’s blog: “G.D. and bother! Set back 1-0, in the glue (10) – (…one of my tippy-top most favorite numbers in all of numberdom.)” Maybe someone can solve it now. Sounds mathematical to me. If anyone’s interested the puzzle link is @28 and the blog is here: http://www.fifteensquared.net/2018/05/02/guardian-cryptic-27498-by-qaos/ Be ware. You might find your past selves in there.

Sagittarius@44 – a tip for you & anyone else – The Spectator online lets you register for 3 articles a month free. That way you don’t have to read anything but 3 crosswords. There are prizes of £30 & 2x£20, so you might even make money out of it!

I loved the anagram of “psychopaths are” into APOTHECARY SHOP.

Once agaiin I fall for the chemical symbol trick in ASTATINE. I also loved “No” as the definition for REFUSAL — I enjoy these sneaky two-letter ones.

Never heard of l’EQUIPE.

manehi, thanks for parsing TORMENT, OBOE, ON THE HOUSE, ROUTE, STAND-OFF, search me (I liked the lift-and-separate of “London Bridge”) and POSH (don’t know any of the other Spice Girls).

Did anyone else go for “impulse” for IMPETUS?

Robi@38 Come all you young dukies and duchesses Heed and mark well what I say Be sure all is yours that you toucheses Or you’ll end up in Botany Bay.

Thanks to Vlad, manehi and Eileen for the links.

FrankieG@46: The answer to DaveMc’s clue seems to be GADOLINIUM. It was comment number 64 in that day’s blog, same as the element’s atomic number.

Thanks Manehi for quite a few parsings that escaped me such as BIAS (bis is new to me) and POSH (not a Spice Girls fan, but they are famous enough for this to be fair I think). ROUTE was one of my favourites, as well as the others mentioned so far. Thanks Vlad.

Quizzy_Bob@49: Well Done! So DaveMc would have had to wait until 63 comments were up before posting, and hope that nobody else clicked the button just before him? That takes real dedication! Unfortunately nobody noticed because everybody had moved on to the next day’s blog. I’m glad I could play some small part in solving his clue, albeit five years late. It’s a nice clue. Also for you: The notable ping-pong player was not able to play because there was no table.

Displaying my ignorance here! Is there a rule for when final Fs become Vs? I had in mind do-it-yourselvers. As in rooves, hooves, calves, etc. Am I very old-fashioned? Misguided? Wrong? Really enjoyed this XW. Thanks all.

James @52: Unfortunately all rules in English have exceptions! Calf → calves, but proof → proofs. There’s a useful summary here .

Hoof can actually go either way, as can dwarf and elf. Rooves is quite rare, roofs much more common.

But the main point here is: F isn’t the final consonant in do-it-yourselfers! (As all the rhotic speakers here will tell you 😉 )

[P.S. Perhaps you were thinking that noun ‘self’ → verb ‘selve’, by analogy with grief → grieve and half → halve? But the construction with do-it-your-selfer is not verb + -er, but noun + -er, eg a proponent of Little England is a Little Englander.]

All cryptics require it to some extent, but this puzzle more than most required you to turn off your automatic parsing circuitry and consider each word or sequence of words in isolation. A lot of very fine challenges here, took quite a few sittings to get it all.

Yes, a beautiful puzzle with some superbly worded clues. Those for ROUTE, OBOE and ASTATINE were my picks. I was puzzled about N for born, but according to Collins, it’s short for NATUS, which is the Latin participle. I guess it’s used in genealogy. Also wasn’t sure about TORMENT for harrow, which I thought meant scare, but once again Collins put me right. Great start to the weekend! Thanks, V and m

Great puzzle, Vlad. Best of the week. Thank you! (Thought ‘EQUIP’ was un peu cheeky though..)

I’d heard of these senses of ‘loon’ and ‘bead’ but not ‘nun’. ‘Loon’ appears in what is surely the most incomprehensible Scots song ever recorded, namely the following:-https://youtu.be/ig_hEe4TVU4

I’ll try the link again

I’m having difficulty getting the YouTube link to work but just look up ‘Ah’m e chiel (sae dinna fash)’ by ‘TheChielMeister’ on YouTube.

Essexboy@54 Is someone who fills/makes shelves a shelfer or a shelver?

esexboy@54 And even the case of verb + -er isn’t consistent. Somebody who build a roof isn’t a roover.

I got the link to work, but I couldn’t understand the piece Too broad for me, though I did spot the Scotch egg. But I do know “dinna fash,” I learned it in Portugal. My father rented a villa there for six months, and we met the lady who managed all the rentals. She’d been doing this job for years, but still didn’t speak a word of Portuguese, so instead of the Portuguese “Nao faz mal” (pronounced “now fash mal”), meaning “no problem,” she’d say “Dinna fash yersel.'”

Me@61 But I suppose that’s via a verb to shelve.

[Petert, yes I agree with you answer to yourselve 😉 But I did find “another bottom shelfer today!” Valentine’s non-roover reminds me of a line (from Mash??) “It’s a mover and a groover and it ain’t by Herbert Hoover.”]

essexboy@64 So a top shelfer is a rude magazine, while a top shelver makes really good storage furniture.

Would someone please explain how it is that COVE=”man”? Thanks.

Splendid puzzle – not the hardest Vlad ever but challenging enough and lots of fun. Thanks, Vlad and manehi.

Savornin – OED says it’s originally thieves’ cant

[essexboy et al passim: There’s an apparent randomness in the standard plurals of nouns ending in -f. Hooves but roofs, loaves but oafs, sheaves but chiefs. Presumably there is an explanation….]

N for nee/born isn’t in Chambers nor Collins on-line: am I just being nit-picky?

Soory, for clarification 17 ac SMETANA…

Hi Savornin@66, I had the same question. I’ve never heard of this before but online Collins has…

COVE old-fashioned, slang, British and Australian a fellow; chap

Good challenge today, thanks Vlad and manehi for the blog which I needed for EXTRA COVER obvs and OF LATE

Hi Savornin at 66, I had the same question. I’ve never heard of this before but online Collins has…

Extraordinarily entertaining – thank you, Vlad!

Many thanks to manehi for a fine blog and to others for their comments.

Oh! Thank you Vlad. And manehi of course.

Nice to see Astatine and Henry for H meaningfully.

Fave has to be 18d ASTATINE despite it being my second-to-LOI. Chemical elements are so often fiendish but a delight when you finally spot them! There aren’t many for which the chemical symbol lends itself easily to misdirection in a cryptic clue: As (arsenic), O (oxygen), I (iodine), He (helium), and In (indium) are well-known examples. I’m minded to try and work “Pa” (protactinium) into a clue sometime – has anyone ever pulled that one off?

And the surface for 18d has to be one of the best I’ve seen for some time.

Altogether well up to Vlad’s usual standard. I couldn’t parse IMPETUS but once I saw the blog, I seem to recall UTE having cropped up before now. I think all cruciverbalists need to have a reasonable grounding in Aussie terminology – it would help a lot!

Thanks to the Impaler and to manehi for explaining it.

essexboy@64 39p for a packet of crisps? You guys got it easy. They’re 99 cents over here. And what flavors! Scampi, charcoal steak chimichurri, chicken tikka masala — we get sour cream and onion, salt and vinegar or barbecue.

Petert@65 I think a top shelver doesn’t manufacture what’s on the shelf but is really fast at loading things onto shelves.

Savonin@66 “Cove” for “man” is very old slang — the earliest usage in my Compact OED is 1587. Shakespeare would have heard it — “thieves’ cant,” as Widdersbel says, like rhyming slang later, intended to be incomprehensible to law-abiding folk. “Cove” has persisted for centuries, unlike “mort” for “woman,” of similar vintage, which is long gone.

[Valentine/Petert – I think I could qualify as a top shelver, as I have a natural talent for procrastination.

Valentine @77, your post prompted me to delve more deeply into the bag of Frazzles. The Instagram link @64 is from 2017, and unhelpfully doesn’t give any indication of the weight of the pack – but I suspect it’s one of those mini-packs you find, placed strategically to tempt shoppers as they queue for the checkout. You can still get packs for 39p or thereabouts online , but the weight might have been reduced (now 34g each).

And then there’s the flavour question. One reviewer of the standard-sized pack on my usual supermarket website (108g for £1.35) was moved to write in rueful vein: “I remember these when they first came out… However, time has taken its toll… Oh Smiths, what have you done?”]

Ed The Ball @71: Thanks for that! Not sure how I missed that as I generally check with Collins.

essexboy@78 Your snacks are way cheaper than ours. £1.35 for six packs compared to $1.29 for one 2-ounce one! (And oh, the contortions I went through to get the pound sign!)

A little late to comment on this one, which I found with only a few answers scattered over the RHS, buried in a pile of recycling. EQUIP was among my first in, with POSH Spice not far behind, but I couldn’t get 1d, which blocked the LHS almost completely. It took me a further hour to finish it this morning. FISTFUL opened things up eventually and it felt like a great achievement to complete the grid.

Belated thanks to Vlad and manehi (managed to avoid calling you Mannheim this time!)

Comments are closed.

Crossword Genius

Duchess ultimately visits on and off — it's enough for duke (7)

Ross

I believe the answer is:

' duchess ultimately visits on and off ' is the definition. I can't judge whether this definition defines the answer. ' enough for duke ' is the wordplay. ' enough ' becomes ' ful ' (I can't explain this - if you can you should believe this answer much more) . ' for ' means one lot of letters go next to another (I've seen this in other clues) . ' duke ' becomes ' fist ' (put up your dukes) . ' ful ' put after ' fist ' is ' FISTFUL '. ' it's ' is the link.

Can you help me to learn more ?

(Other definitions for fistful that I've seen before include "Amount a hand holds" , "amount of dollars?" , "As much as can be held in the hand" , "it should be within one's grasp" , "A -- of Dollars (film)" .)

COMMENTS

  1. Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched (2-2-11)

    do-it-yourselfers. 'homeworkers' is the definition. 'to fred seriously touched' is the wordplay. 'touched' indicates anagramming the letters (letters touched or moved about). 'tofredseriously' is an anagram of 'DO-IT-YOURSELFERS'.

  2. homeworkers to Fred seriously touched Crossword Clue

    The Crossword Solver found 30 answers to "homeworkers to Fred seriously touched", 15 letters crossword clue. The Crossword Solver finds answers to classic crosswords and cryptic crossword puzzles. Enter the length or pattern for better results. Click the answer to find similar crossword clues . Enter a Crossword Clue.

  3. Homeworkers To Fred Seriously Touched Crossword Clue

    The crossword clue Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched with 15 letters was last seen on the March 03, 2023. We found 20 possible solutions for this clue. We think the likely answer to this clue is DOITYOURSELFERS. You can easily improve your search by specifying the number of letters in the answer.

  4. Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched

    Today's crossword puzzle clue is a cryptic one: Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched. We will try to find the right answer to this particular crossword clue. Here are the possible solutions for "Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched" clue. It was last seen in The Guardian cryptic crossword. We have 1 possible answer in our database.

  5. Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched

    Number of letters. Enter which letters you already have. Start Over. Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched crossword clue? Find the answer to the crossword clue Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched. 1 answer to this clue.

  6. Homeworkers To Fred Seriously Touched Crossword Clue

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched. ANSWER: DOITYOURSELFERS. Already solved this crossword clue? Go back and see the other clues for The Guardian Cryptic Crossword 29008 Answers. Let us give you a warm welcome to thank you for visiting our site. Find below all Homeworkers To Fred Seriously Touched Crossword Clue.

  7. Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched (2-2-11) Crossword Clue

    It's touched in a touchdown: IMMOVED "That really touched me" SPACEBAR: It's touched by the thumb: INTEARS: Deeply touched, perhaps: KISSED: Barely touched: INSANEST: ... Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched (2-2-11) Reveal: Workers with new party in impasse (5-3) Reveal: Twice harbouring a prejudice (4) Reveal: Small change affected her plans (8)

  8. Cryptic crossword No 29,008

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched (2-2-11) 2. Workers with new party in impasse (5-3) 3. Twice harbouring a prejudice (4) 4. Small change affected her plans (8) 5. Idiot in school's a pain (6) 6.

  9. He Played Fred The Junkman Crossword Clue

    The crossword clue He played Fred the junkman. with 4 letters was last seen on the January 01, 1999. We found 20 possible solutions for this clue. ... Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched 2% ELY: Ron who played Tarzan 2% OWL: He gives a hoot 2% ACTED: Played a role 2% POLO: Sport played on horseback ...

  10. The Guardian Cryptic Crossword 29008 Answers

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched; Workers with new party in impasse; Twice harbouring a prejudice; Small change affected her plans; Idiot in school's a pain; Don't know location of London Bridge? Head for market close to here; Game about having fancy man over desk; Unpredictable psychopaths are gathering round former drug dealer

  11. Guardian Cryptic 29,008 by Vlad

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched (2-2-11) anagram/"touched" of (to Fred seriously)* 2: STAND-OFF: Workers with new party in impasse (5-3) STAFF="Workers", with both N (new) + DO="party" inside: 3: BIAS: Twice harbouring a prejudice (4) BIS ("Twice", musical direction), around A: 4:

  12. Seriously Unimpressive Crossword Clue

    The crossword clue Seriously unimpressive. with 4 letters was last seen on the February 24, 2016. We found 20 possible solutions for this clue. ... Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched 2% 8 SOLEMNLY: Seriously cunning catching mole (foreign nationalist) 2% 4 WHAT: NASA's possible question to lost space probe — seriously? ...

  13. Duchess ultimately visits on and off

    'duchess ultimately visits on and off ' is the definition. I can't judge whether this definition defines the answer. ' enough for duke ' is the wordplay. ' enough ' becomes ' ful ' (I can't explain this - if you can you should believe this answer much more). ' for ' means one lot of letters go next to another (I've seen this in other clues). ' duke ' becomes ' fist ' (put up your dukes). ' ful ...

  14. 2010 comedy starring tina fey (2 wds.) Crossword Clue

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched (2-2-11) ANGELA BASSETT: Actress who played rock star Tina Turner in the 1993 film What's Love Got to Do With It: 2 wds. MAINTAIN: Keep leading Tina astray FEY: 30 Rock star Tina ___ ARENA: Young Talent Time star (Tina -----) LIFE: 2010 comedy-drama film starring Katherine Heigl and Josh Duhamel (4,2,2,4,2) ...

  15. Fellow plotter (2-11) Crossword Clue

    The Crossword Solver found 30 answers to "Fellow plotter (2 11)", 13 letters crossword clue. The Crossword Solver finds answers to classic crosswords and cryptic crossword puzzles. Enter the length or pattern for better results. Click the answer to find similar crossword clues . Enter a Crossword Clue. Sort by Length. # of Letters or Pattern.

  16. "No, Seriously"

    The crossword clue "No, seriously". with 10 letters was last seen on the January 01, 2013. We found 20 possible solutions for this clue. Below are all possible answers to this clue ordered by its rank. ... Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched 3% SUCH "No __ luck!" 3% AINT "— No Sunshine" 3% SOLEMNLY: Seriously cunning catching mole (foreign ...

  17. Revealed in touching way

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched; Supply content for a French paper; More Clues. A model in a Nativity scene of the manger in which the infant Jesus Christ was laid at birth; a wicker basket; a cowshed for oxen; a bin for grain; a card game developed from noddy; or, a little bed for a baby

  18. Be smarter than winner? What do you think?

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched; Don't know location of London Bridge? Head for market close to here; No bother mostly cutting through concrete; Game about having fancy man over desk; Harrow teacher cycling to Thailand; At home in New York, perhaps; Unpredictable psychopaths are gathering round former drug dealer; Artist one criminal ...

  19. Everything He Touched Turned To Gold Crossword Clue

    The crossword clue Everything he touched turned to gold. with 5 letters was last seen on the January 01, 2012. We found 20 possible solutions for this clue. Below are all possible answers to this clue ordered by its rank. You can easily improve your search by specifying the number of letters in the answer. Rank. Length.

  20. 2004 comedy written by and costarring Tina Fey (2 wds.) Crossword Clue

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched (2-2-11) NADINE: Robert Benton directed this 1987 comedy, written specifically for Kim Basinger (6) THE PROPOSAL: 2009 Sandra Bullock romantic comedy costarring Ryan Reynolds: 2 wds. SILICON VALLEY: Tech-industry comedy series costarring Kumail Nanjiani as programmer Dinesh Chugtai: 2 wds. ...

  21. Twice harbouring a prejudice

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched; Drive truck back surrounded by monkeys; Workers with new party in impasse; Composer Zuckerberg's baby born in South Africa; Artist one criminal attacks violently; Run, man, run! He may stop him; At home in New York, perhaps; Henry staying in York location for free; Land fish — one is thrown back, having ...

  22. Sarah's Heart Is Touched By Rich Old Statesman Crossword Clue

    The crossword clue Sarah's heart is touched by rich old statesman. with 6 letters was last seen on the December 21, 2018. We found 20 possible solutions for this clue. ... Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched 2% 4 ORES: Rich rocks 2% 7 FEEDSON: Is sustained by 2% 6 ALGORE: Old statesman having, alas, good read halved 2% ...

  23. seriously affected Crossword Clue

    Homeworkers to Fred seriously touched (2-2-11) Advertisement. ARGON: Gas badly affected organ (5) ERICSSON: Necrosis badly affected explorer (8) SHORTAGES: In which shares got badly affected? HIT THE SACK: Badly affected by dismissal, so retire SECTION: Cut once it ' s badly affected