Why Do Setters Use 'Immortal' For The Highlander Crossword Clue?

2026-02-03 17:27:11 100
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4 Answers

Sawyer
Sawyer
2026-02-05 23:08:34
I grin whenever I see 'Highlander' clued as immortal because it’s such a compact pop-culture shortcut. Setters lean on shared knowledge: most people who’ve heard of 'Highlander' know the immortal duel premise or at least the phrase 'there can be only one,' which implies immortality. So the clue isn’t trying to be sneaky about meaning; it’s using a well-known fictional trait as the definition part of the clue.

Sometimes the clue will dress that up with wordplay somewhere else in the line, but the core idea is simple—use the title as a definitional hook. For quick crosswords especially, these kinds of references are friendly and efficient, giving the solver a fast recognition moment and often a satisfying smile when the grid fills in. I like that tiny cultural handshake!
Lillian
Lillian
2026-02-06 21:32:23
Seeing 'Highlander' clued as immortal makes me chuckle because it’s just pure pop-culture shorthand—the franchise is built on immortal warriors, so why not use that trait as a direct clue? Setters love compact, recognisable hooks, and 'immortal' nails it immediately for anyone who knows the movie or TV show.

It also works as a mild red herring for newcomers: you might expect a geographical angle (a Scot, a clansman), but instead you get the fictional trait. That flip of expectations is part of the crossword fun, and I always get a little pleased when the grid confirms the pop-culture nod.
Samuel
Samuel
2026-02-08 10:32:12
I love that little crossword wink—setters drop 'immortal' for the clue 'Highlander' because the franchise itself revolves around immortals. In the films and TV spin-offs the protagonists are literally immortal beings who fight until only one remains; that cultural shorthand lets a setter use 'Highlander' as a neat surface for an immortal. It’s an instant, recognisable link for solvers who know the pop-culture reference.

Beyond the fandom nod, there’s a technical reason: crossword clues often play with proper nouns and definitions. If a clue uses a capitalised title like 'Highlander', the setter is permitted to treat it as the fictional character-type rather than a geographical Scotsman. So the clue becomes a tidy definition—'Highlander' => immortal—while the rest of the clue supplies wordplay or surface misdirection. I always enjoy spotting those moments where movie lore and clue conventions collide; it feels like a shared joke between setter and solver.
Xavier
Xavier
2026-02-08 16:32:57
I often approach crossword clues with a slight linguistic glee, and 'Highlander'→immortal is a textbook example of how setters exploit cultural denotation. The word 'immortal' is functionally the semantic label for the central characters in 'Highlander', so a setter can legitimately place it as the definition. In cryptic terms, that capitalised title signals to the solver that the reference is to a work or character-type rather than a literal inhabitant of the Highlands.

There’s also an elegance to this kind of clue-making: it compresses a backstory into one word, relying on shared cultural literacy. Some setters prefer full &lit-style clues where the entire surface reads as both definition and wordplay, but here the setter simply borrows the fiction as a definitional crutch. I appreciate how such clues reward a little outside knowledge—solving one feels like participating in a tiny club of people who’ve both seen the film/series and like filling in grids.
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