Where Can I Find Examples Of Omnipotent Crossword Clue Usage?

2026-02-03 07:11:51 257
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1 Answers

Claire
Claire
2026-02-09 19:21:19
If you love the little sleights-of-hand that make cryptic crosswords feel like tiny magic tricks, the phrase 'omnipotent clue' probably grabbed your attention because it hints at a clue that feels all-powerful — usually what setters call an '&lit' or 'all-in-one' clue. In plain terms, that’s a clue where the whole surface doubles as the definition and the whole thing also performs the wordplay. They’re the kind of clue that makes you stop and grin when the lights click on, because the entire sentence somehow both describes the answer and constructs it. I get a kick out of these, almost the way I geek out when a show like 'Naruto' sneaks a clever cultural callback into a battle scene — it’s elegance and showmanship combined.

If you want concrete examples and curated collections, there are a few places I always point people to. Cruciverb is the heavyweight database used by solvers and setters alike; it catalogs crossword puzzles (mostly UK and US broadsheet crosswords) and often notes clue types — you can search their index for '&lit', 'all-in-one' or specific setters known for playful cluing. The Guardian and The Times archives are excellent for classic British cryptic examples; both papers publish setters who enjoy &lit clues and you can browse past puzzles (Guardian’s cryptic archive is particularly user-friendly). For discussion and community-collected examples, look at the Puzzling Stack Exchange threads tagged with '&lit' or 'cryptic-clues' — people post examples, disassemble them, and debate whether something truly counts as &lit. Crossword blogs like Crossword Fiend and forums like the Ximenean discussions (search for the Ximenean approach to cryptic clueing) are also gold mines for annotated examples and meta-discussion on when a clue qualifies as all-encompassing. For books, a solid cryptic primer plus a Chambers or Collins crossword dictionary will give you background and lots of examples to study; many collections of puzzles include notes pointing out special clue types.

If you want to train your eye for this style, I’d hunt specifically for the search terms '&lit examples', 'all-in-one cryptic clue', and 'whole-clue definition' plus site names like 'Guardian cryptic' or 'Cruciverb'. When you read each clue, ask two quick questions: can the entire clue read as a natural definition of the solution, and does the clue also transparently break down into wordplay that constructs that solution? If both boxes tick, you’re probably looking at an &lit. A fun practice routine is to collect half a dozen examples, write your own annotated breakdowns, then compare with community write-ups — you learn as much from borderline examples as you do from textbook ones. Personally, discovering &lit clues felt like unlocking a new level of appreciation for setters’ craft; they’re showy in the best way, and they make me want to sit down with a cup of tea and a stack of puzzles for the afternoon. Happy clue-hunting — I hope you find some of those neat, gratifying moments where the clue just clicks.
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