Can British Clues Use Condemn Crossword Clue Differently?

2025-11-06 13:43:00 163

4 Answers

Jack
Jack
2025-11-09 20:08:28
you get it as the straight definition: the setter intends the surface sense — so 'condemn' = 'damn', 'pan', 'censure', 'doom', 'sentence', etc. That’s the bread-and-butter use and it can sit at either end of the clue, so you learn to hunt for it as a clean definition or its synonym.

Beyond that, 'condemn' often crops up inside the wordplay. A setter might use a synonym like 'pan' or 'damn' as part of a charade (stick bits together), or hide it across words in a hidden-word clue. It can also feature in a double-definition or cryptic-definition clue where the whole surface reads like a mini joke that both defines and misdirects. Sometimes the whole clue is an &lit where every word contributes and the definition is 'condemn' in a broader sense — I still grin when those turn up. Personally, I relish how one tiny verb pushes you to think of synonyms, structures, and surface misdirection — it keeps the solving spark alive.
Kate
Kate
2025-11-11 03:35:30
There's a neat economy to British cryptics that makes 'condemn' more versatile than it looks. I tend to slow down when that verb appears because it might be the straight definition, a synonym used in the wordplay, or part of a cryptic definition that relies on British setters' love of dry misdirection. For example, 'condemn' can be the definition for a short answer like 'pan' or 'damn', but it might also clue a longer word such as 'denounce' or 'censure' depending on enumeration and crossing letters.

Setters sometimes use verbs like 'condemn' as surface glue in &lit clues, where the whole clue reads as one sentence that also serves as both definition and wordplay. It's less common to see 'condemn' functioning as an anagram indicator — most solvers wouldn't expect that — but it can act as a containment hint if the surface suggests someone being put 'inside' a sentence metaphorically. The main practical tip I give myself: treat 'condemn' as a flag to look for synonyms and flexible surfaces, and don't assume it only ever points to one cryptic device; British clues love to play with expectations.
Felix
Felix
2025-11-11 18:13:59
I love spotting the little ways a single word like 'condemn' is recycled in puzzles. One playful angle is the double-definition: a clue might give two different senses of 'condemn' — say, moral censure and legal punishment — and both point to the same solution. Another is the hidden/containment trick: if the surface hints at someone being trapped or enclosed, 'condemn' could be nudging you toward a hidden answer inside adjacent words.

Then there are those sly &lit or cryptic-definition moments where the whole clue reads like a blunt sentence that actually defines the answer, so 'condemn' is not just a dictionary pointer but the emotional tone of the surface. Practically speaking, when I see 'condemn' I immediately inventory short synonyms ('pan', 'damn', 'rap') and longer candidates ('denounce', 'censure', 'sentence'), then inspect the structure for hidden words, containers, or a jokey definition. It's a tiny word with a lot of puzzle mileage, and I enjoy the little mental hop it forces.
Carly
Carly
2025-11-12 05:59:01
Short and practical: yes, British clues can — and do — use 'condemn' in different ways. Most commonly it's a straight definition ('condemn' = 'damn', 'pan', 'censure' etc.), but setters also treat it as fodder for wordplay, a hook for hidden answers, or the tone-word in an &lit/cryptic-definition clue. For solvers: watch for short synonyms when crossings look tight, and for a more expansive surface that hints at a double meaning or whole-clue definition. It’s the kind of word that rewards flexible thinking, which is why I still enjoy puzzles that throw it at me.
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