Clues are in blue, with definitions underlined. Answers are in BOLD CAPS, then wordplay. (ABC*) means ‘anagram of ABC’. Deletions are in [square brackets].
Across
1 After Bill, my French is hard to criticise (8)
ADMONISH: AD=bill, MON=my (in French), IS, H=hard.
9 Covers remaining fabrications (8)
OVERLIES: OVER=remaining, LIES=fabrications.
10 Quakers banishing leader of religious fanatics (6)
FIENDS: Quakers are the Society of FRIENDS. Remove R=leader of “religious”. I did have to pause to remember what the Quakers are called.
11 Reckless current married couple ford river (10)
IMMODERATE: ODER=the river. Cover it with I=(electrical) current, M=married, MATE=couple.
12 Pretty short message: “Time flies” (4)
TWEE: TWEE[t]=short message, but the final T=time flies away.
13 Henry and I ship sewer’s output perhaps (10)
HANDICRAFT: H=Henry, AND, I, CRAFT=ship.
16 Mark wise, so to speak, to embrace brief hard puzzle? (7)
MYSTIFY: M=mark, YY=two y’s, sounding like “wise”. All of that “embraces” STIF[f]=hard, briefly.
17 Remarkably frosty when accepting new briefs (1-6)
Y-FRONTS: anagram (“remarkably”) of (FROSTY*), “accepting” N=new. Easy now if you remember it from 5 weeks earlier, on that occasion clued as a homophone.
20 Present brand new napkins etc. (5,5)
TABLE LINEN: TABLE=present, LINE=brand, N=new.
22 Departing, having forfeited one award (4)
GONG: GO[i]NG=departing, “forfeiting” I=one.
23 Posted again across the Atlantic, he defends suit (10)
RESPONDENT: RESENT=posted again, “across” POND=the Atlantic.
25 Bring on cool drink for the audience (6)
INDUCE: IN=cool, then DUCE sounds more or less like “juice”. I don’t think I personally pronounce D’s like J’s, but near enough I suppose. Certainly it features in some varieties of Australian accent.
26 Word founts possibly a hit with user (8)
THESAURI: anagram (“possibly”) of (A HIT USER*).
27 Purgative lists boring this Parisian Republican (8)
CLEANSER: LEANS=lists, placed inside (i.e. “boring”) CE=this in French, R=Republican.
Down
2 Repulse without first of all making approach (8)
DRIVEWAY: DRIVE [a]WAY=repulse, losing A=first of A[ll].
3 Fancy somebody with books entering exam! (10)
ORNAMENTAL: NAME=somebody (important), NT=a collection of books. All inside (“entering”) ORAL=exam.
4 Sunlight, if split up, can be penetrating (10)
INSIGHTFUL: anagram (“split up”) of (SUNLIGHT IF*).
5 It stimulates hard men with endless cash (7)
HORMONE: H=hard, OR=men, MONE[y]=”endless” cash.
6 Some people adore the first name in lights? (4)
LEAD: hidden answer.
7 Flier spies treacherous guy breaking in (6)
CICADA: CIA=spies, with CAD=treacherous guy “breaking in”.
8 I might end up lagging, like worst cartographers (8)
ASBESTOS: AS=like, BEST=worst (as in, I BESTED/WORSTED him), OS=Ordnance Survey=cartographers.
14 Four crammed in unlimited term in grammar (10)
INFINITIVE: IV=four, in INFINITE.
15 Garner food supply that’s grown at highest level (4,6)
ROOF GARDEN: an anagram of (GARNER FOOD*) “supplies” the answer. I think if you take “garden” as a verb, the whole clue is an &lit type of definition.
16 Full development of article in molten yttrium (8)
MATURITY: AN=article, in anagram (“molten”) of (YTTRIUM*).
18 Old Spanish wine buff acquires large organ (8)
TENTACLE: TENT=old Spanish wine, ACE=buff, “acquiring” L.
19 Weak academic not available for computer-aided design (7)
ANAEMIC: A[cad]ADEMIC, losing CAD=computer aided design, and replacing it by NA=not available.
21 Book addict hugs King’s Head player in street (6)
BUSKER: B=book, USER=addict “hugging” K=king.
24 Part of speech from woman in order to secure Oscar (4)
NOUN: NUN=woman in order, “securing” O=Oscar in phonetic alphabet.
Edited at 2019-03-02 06:14 am (UTC)
Edited at 2019-03-02 07:10 am (UTC)
which is NQR IMHO. My LOI once 2dn DRIVEWAY was laid.
FOI 210ac TABLE LINEN
COD 5dn HORMONE
WOD 26ac THESAURI
All done in no time!
However I did finish it eventually and thought it was a very enjoyable challenge.
The bottom half went in more easily for me. My LOI was FIENDS after long stares at the clues for DRIVEWAY and ORNAMENTAL. OVERLIES, IMMODERATE and ASBESTOS also held me up. Oder for river -there seems to be a lot of German in the clues at the moment. My mind was still on Robert Pflanz last Saturday.
David
I’m not sure about the INDUCE/JUICE homophone. I think I generally pronounce the D in INDUCE distinctly but I suspect that distinction would get lost sometimes when I’m speaking quickly.
One typo. HORMONY. Which brings to mind Maggie’s rhetorical question when first elected to Number 10. “Where there’s a disco, may we bring Harmony?” I think that’s right.
LOI: ANAEMIC. COD: DRIVEWAY.
Same misgivings as Jack on the definition of “cad”.
Didn’t find it particularly easy, but no biffing was required.
FOI ADMONISH
LOI & COD ASBESTOS
TIME 12:01
More straightforward than normal for your Saturday puzzle that is our Thursday one that was able to get done in a couple of sessions taking around the 40 minutes. ADMONISH was first in which was quite easily built from the word play. TWEE was my last and needed the W from DRIVEWAY to get away from the unparse-able CUTE that was dominating most of the early thinking.
LAGGING as the insulating material was the only new term for me.
31 minutes with this error.
COD 2D driveway