Poker Token Crossword Clue
Everyman 3,865
Posted by Quirister on November 15th, 2020
The CroswodSolver.com system found 25 answers for token crossword clue. Our system collect crossword clues from most populer crossword, cryptic puzzle, quick/small crossword that found in Daily Mail, Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, Daily Mirror, Herald-Sun, The Courier-Mail, Dominion Post and many others popular newspaper.
Another fun puzzle from Everyman, with most of the usual features we’ve come to expect.
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On this page you will find the solution to Poker buy-in crossword clue crossword clue. This clue was last seen on June 10 2019 on New York Times’s Crossword. If you have any other question or need extra help, please feel free to contact us or use the search box/calendar for any clue. Poker in which each player receives hole cards and the remainder are dealt face up; bets are placed after each card is dealt Other crossword clues with similar answers to 'Poker game' Alternative to draw or ho.
The clues range from pretty straightforward to quite complex, which I think is what Everyman intends (to give beginners a way in, while still challenging more seasoned solvers). We have some homophones, a handful of anagrams (with only one debatable anagram indicator this time), and one unrecognisable word in a clue which I’m going to assume is a Guardian typo. Three linked entries this time rather than two: 1a, 25a and 4d, each of which is two words both starting with C. As usual the surfaces are occasionally a bit rough, but there are some good ones – I laughed at 20a and 23a. Thanks Everyman as always.
Definitions are underlined; BOLD UPPERCASE indicates letters used in the wordplay; square brackets [ ] indicate omitted letters.
Poker Token Crossword Puzzle Clue
Gambling Token Crossword Clue
ACROSS | ||
1 | CRUISE CONTROL | Stunt-performing actor given key for automotive device (6,7) |
CRUISE (actor Tom Cruise, who is known for doing his own stunts in action films) + CONTROL (key). | ||
8 | OBOE | Endlessly booed scordato member of orchestra (4) |
Anagram of BOOE[d] without its last letter (endlessly). Everyman is known for somewhat eccentric anagram indicators; scordato is a musical term describing a stringed instrument where one or more strings are tuned higher or lower than their normal pitches. Whether that corresponds to “anagram” is a matter of opinion. | ||
9 | DUE PROCESS | Course sped around with appropriate safeguards (3,7) |
Anagram (around) of COURSE SPED. Following due process = doing something properly according to the rules. | ||
10 | HANDEL | Composer‘s name called out (6) |
Homophone (called out) of HANDLE (a pseudonym or radio call-sign, or just slang for a name). | ||
11 | UNAFRAID | Intoxicated faun to make incursion, being fearless (8) |
Anagram (intoxicated) of FAUN, then RAID (incursion). | ||
12 | HANDIWORK | Doing borders of Hawaii, then either border of Woodstock (9) |
Two variations on an old trick: the borders (end letters) of Hawaii are H AND I, and either border of Woodstock is W OR K. Doing = handiwork = what someone has done. Psalm 118:23 – “This is the Lord’s doing; it is marvellous in our eyes.” | ||
14 | AIRS | Eldest of children usually expressed pretentiousness (4) |
Homophone (expressed) of HEIRS (eldest of children usually; this confused me for a while until I remembered that “eldest” could be plural). As in “putting on airs” = being pretentious. | ||
15 | ICES | Big cheese regularly chills (4) |
Alternate letters (regularly) of [b]I[g] C[h]E[e]S[e]. Ice, as a verb = to cool something down using ice. | ||
16 | ADORINGLY | Kerfuffle before token of love offered on vacation lovingly, lovingly (9) |
ADO (kerfuffle = disruption) + RING (token of love offered) + L[ovingl]Y (on vacation = when emptied = middle letters removed). | ||
20 | TIA MARIA | Dry in the morning; before start of afternoon, Italian’s knocked back liqueur (3,5) |
AIR (as a verb = hang up clothes to dry) + AM (in the morning) + start of A[fternoon] + IT (Italian), all reversed (knocked back). The liqueur was a fairly easy guess from the letter counts, but the parsing took a while. | ||
21 | MOUTHY | Someone with a lisp’s shy, becoming talkative (6) |
Shy = MOUSY, which someone with a lisp may pronounce as MOUTHY. Slang for talkative, especially describing someone who isn’t afraid to say exactly what they think. | ||
23 | STRING VEST | Vet’s confused after duck escapes holding underwear (6,4) |
Anagram (confused) of VET’S, after ST[o]RING (holding) without the O (zero = duck in cricket scoring). | ||
24 | DIVA | Singer‘s keen on retiring (4) |
AVID (keen), reversed (on retiring). | ||
25 | CHEDDAR CHEESE | Cheered and chased off something from Somerset (7,6) |
Anagram (off) of CHEERED + CHASED. The classic UK cheese, originally from the village of Cheddar in Somerset, but now copied everywhere. | ||
DOWN | ||
1 | CABBALA | Primarily ‘correspondence’: arcane Biblical beliefs; Abrahamic literature absorbed? (7) |
Everyman’s usual “primarily” clue, using the initial letters of the clue words. Belief system based on mystical interpretation of Hebrew Biblical texts, with various spellings including Kabbalah. | ||
2 | U-BEND | Whereby unpleasant burden is exclusing reek, primarily? (1-4) |
Anagram (unpleasant) of BU[r]DEN, without the initial letter (primarily) of R[eek]. I assume “exclusing” is a misprint for “excluding”; the “s” form is used in words such as exclusion / exclusive, but not as a verb in its own right, as far as I can see. Extended definition: U-bend = a bend in a waste-water outlet pipe, which acts as a trap to block unpleasant-smelling sewer gases. | ||
3 | SOD’S LAW | So Dad’s starter comes on a salad? Something bad will inevitably occur (4,3) |
SO + starting letter of D[ad] + SLAW (salad of shredded cabbage or similar vegetables). Alternative name for Murphy’s Law = “anything that can go wrong will go wrong”. | ||
4 | CHEQUERED CAREER | Wildly cheered queer car that’s had good and bad times (9,6) |
Anagram (wildly) of CHEERED QUEER CAR. Chequered career (chequered past, chequered history, etc) = a mixture of success and failure. | ||
5 | NORWAY | Some forsaken or waylaid in the country (6) |
Hidden answer (some) in [forsake]N OR WAY[laid]. | ||
6 | RECURSION | Going back to find suspicious Puerto Ricans denied tap dancing (9) |
Anagram (suspicious) of [p]UER[t]O RIC[a]NS, with the letters TAP removed. I think “dancing” is just telling us that these three letters don’t appear together in order, but I’m not sure it’s strictly necessary, except to make sense of the surface. | ||
7 | LASSIES | Fool with slander, perhaps, about young women (7) |
ASS (fool), with LIES (slander perhaps) around (about) it. Lassie = Scottish word for a girl or young woman. | ||
13 | DREAMLIKE | ‘Milk a deer’? That’s freakish, surreal (9) |
Anagram (freakish) of MILK A DEER. | ||
15 | IDIOTIC | Unwise to assemble 3rd, 7th, 9th, 20th, 22nd, 27th & 28th pieces from Dmitri Dmitrievich Shostakovich (7) |
The 3rd, 7th, 9th . . . letters in the specified composer‘s full name. Rather an obvious trick, but Everyman does like to provide a few easy clues to get beginners started. | ||
17 | REMATCH | Mum’s overcome by strain when game’s played again (7) |
MA (mother = mum), contained in RETCH (strain, as a verb). | ||
18 | LE HAVRE | Corrupt chevalier’s heading off, abandoning one French city (2,5) |
Anagram (corrupt) of [c]HEVAL[i]ER, without the heading (first letter) and the I (one in Roman numerals). | ||
19 | FRIGID | Run into tree? Everyman would, becoming unresponsive (6) |
R (abbreviation for run in cricket scoring) inserted into FIG (a type of tree), then I’D (Everyman, the crossword setter, would). | ||
22 | UNDUE | Fun duet; ‘side splitting’? … a bit much (5) |
[f]UN DUE[t], splitting away the outer letters (side splitting). Undue (as in undue haste) = more than necessary. |