

Tamera, to Tia, for short crossword clue.Disney character that sings "Let It Go" crossword clue.1960s Israeli deputy prime minister crossword clue.HDTVS Varnish applications COATS Unfit for use (of appliance) UNSERVICEABLE Underarm application ROLLONDEODORANTĭid you get the correct answer for your Applied in a slapdash manner crossword clue? Then check out this Wall Street Journal Crossword other crossword clue. SOP Word for a small kitchen appliance that was added to Merriam-Webster in 2021 (2 wds.) AIRFRYER Wood furniture application STAIN Wood applications STAINS With 6-Across, chap application LIP Winter sidewalk application ICEMELT Where shampoo is applied SCALP Where shadow can be applied on the face EYELID Where mascara is applied LASH Where makeup is applied FACE Where deodorant is applied, informally PITS What the repairperson said to the broken appliance? YOURESOBUSTED What can be requested on a US birth certificate application SSN Wedding application HENNA Vizio appliances with crisp resolution: Abbr. We think DAUBED is the possible answer on this clue.Ĭrossword clues for Applied in a slapdash manner Clue Answer Applied in a slapdash manner DAUBED _-F4 (keyboard combo that closes the current application) ALT _ shadow (makeup applied to lids) EYE _ processor (small kitchen appliance) FOOD _ paint (graffiti application) SPRAY _ on (applies) PUTS _ fryer (restaurant appliance) DEEP _ fridge (dorm-room appliance) MINI Written part of a college application: Abbr. This answers first letter of which starts with D and can be found at the end of D. The crossword clue possible answer is available in 6 letters. Probably my favourite clue today.This crossword clue Applied in a slapdash manner was discovered last seen in the at the Wall Street Journal Crossword. It is also being shown a week today at some small hour of the morning.ĥa A foreign coin collection housed in the plant (6)

#SLAPDASH CROSSWORD CLUE TV#
We may need a TV reviewer for that one! Set those recorders, although I suspect it will be on the BBC i-Player for those within the UK, if you do miss it.
#SLAPDASH CROSSWORD CLUE HOW TO#
By the way, next Monday at 8pm on BBC4, you can see the excellent documentary How to Solve A Cryptic Crossword which features our very own Giovanni, as well as Colin Dexter and one or two other setters of repute. You can have your say after the blog and we encourage you to do so. The ones here today just don’t work for me and that holds the puzzle back and it’s ultimately a shame. It’s noticeable that many of what I regard as my favourite setters all use the CD only once or twice in a puzzle. I realise that on a Monday we are spoilt by having one of the wizards of the CD clue, and it is almost the main weapon of some of the other setters and not always well-used (the Saturday setter comes to mind), so I almost feel it is done to death in the DT puzzles. The downside is that some of the surface reading can seem a bit odd.Įasily, where the puzzle falls for me is on the Cryptic Definitions. This is actually a skill that many of her contemporaries don’t have and strive for. Excalibur tries to provide clues that are concise, and indeed unlike some setters, there is little of what might be called padding in her clues, although at times the definitions are a little broad for my liking. So I looked at the puzzle from a different angle.

There seems little point, as probably the majority of you will disagree with me anyway. Perhaps you are all going to expect me to say how much I hated it and so on, but I am not going to. Indeed, I first encountered Excalibur as the setter of the old Weekend Magazine Stinker Crossword and there is little evidence to suggest the style has changed. The style offered by today’s setter is, as I have remarked before, reminiscent of the days from when I first started solving crosswords in the late 1960’s and early seventies. Indeed, one thing was certain today, within a minute or two of reading the clues, I knew who had set it. Likewise, one or two have a certain way of writing their clues that gives us an indication. One or two setters have such distinct styles, as well as one or two tricks that enable us to recognise who they are, which does help us. Although we generally can identify the daily puzzle setters, the Toughies are somewhat harder to pin down, and we usually have to wait until one of us has consulted that day’s paper to find out, as the people at CluedUp seem unwilling to let us know. Reading yesterday’s Big Dave blog of the daily puzzle, there was a considerable amount of debate as to who the setter was, and indeed most of us rather got it wrong. Thanks to Big Dave for covering my blogs for me while I was away. I was certainly relieved to get home and am taking things easy over the next few days. Thanks to you all for your kind wishes while I was in hospital. Toughie No 262 by Excalibur Smoke and Mirrors
