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3d. What Warne did is insolent (4) B?L?
12a. Constant unit it diverts in numbers on roads (4) C?N?
No best answer has yet been selected by ashfordshe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well its not just that is it? If I am bold that does not make me insolent, if I am insolent that does not make me bold.
insolent, adjective disrespectful and rude; impudent.
bold, adjective daring; actively courageous; forward or impudent; presumptuous; executed vigorously; striking, noticeable, well marked; steep or abrupt; (of eg currants) full-flavoured, mature, plump; (of type) bold-faced.
And I doubt if there is a thesaurus in the land that would give the two words as synonyms of each other. Truly awful clue if bold is the answer the compiler is looking for.
Well its just as well I do not do the Mail's crosswords then if this an acceptable clue! I think most cruciverbalists would shrink back in horror at the thought that you had to find a linking word first before you could find the solution to the clue - ie insolent to impudent to bold.
I am not a crossword compiler by any means and this will be a poor example but it is in the same manner as the Mail clue - 'Was the lady that Chichester sailed with homosexual?' To get your answer you would have to go from homosexual to gay (the linking word) to lively. There is no need to do it that way so why do so? If my clue had read 'Was the lady that Chichester sailed with gay?' then surely that is far more reasonable as a clue.
If the compiler had used the word impudent (or another meaning bold) then although the clue is still far from perfect without the hint that the word you are looking for sounds like what Warne did, it would at least be better.
Perhaps I am getting old but I find that quite a few clues these days violate the 'spirit' of a genuinely clever cryptic clue. This Mail clue is anything but that, in my opinion.