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Telegraph Giant General Knowledge Answers - Saturday, 4th March 2023

There are 32 across clues and 30 down clues for the Telegraph Giant General Knowledge crossword on Saturday, 4th March 2023. View the answers below..

The Answers

Number# Clue Answer
AAcross 9: Noted for satirical works including The Book of Snobs and Vanity Fair: Pen and Pencil Sketches of English Society, novelist to whom Charlotte Brontë dedicated Jane Eyre
AAcross 10: An afternoon refection of cakes, finger sandwiches and scones; a “high” cooked meal with bread-and-butter in the early evening; or, a hot infusion of Camellia sinensis leaves accompanying either repast
AAcross 11: Cavalry collectively; a “buck” for gymnastically vaulting over; a clothes airer; an equid such as a cob, hack, hunter or shire; or, the male of said animal, as opposed to a mare
AAcross 13: A bike’s bidon holder; dialect for a squirrel’s drey; a netted structure for protecting garden fruit; or, an aviary, chicken coop, prison cell, rabbit hutch or other enclosure
AAcross 14: A coil of ribbon or a tube of fabric as a trimming for a coat or a dress; or, a stack of coins wrapped in paper
AAcross 15: From an old word for a blue gem thought to be an aquamarine or a sapphire, a larkspur that sprang from the blood of a lover of Apollo; a pink, purple, violet or white liliaceous spring flower; or, cinnamon stone
AAcross 16: Elegant drawing/reception rooms; gatherings of distinguished cenacles in fashionable households; halls for exhibiting art; the exhibitions therein; or, beauty parlours
AAcross 17: Calxes of the feet near the tali; corresponding parts of socks or stockings; spurs; stiletto shoes; ends of cheeses or loaves; or, cads
AAcross 18: A forename of Lord Byron’s daughter Countess of Lovelace, who said that the analytical engine “weaves algebraic patterns, just as the Jacquard loom weaves flowers and leaves”
AAcross 19: Word, originally spelled like its homophone “key”, for a harbour’s berth, landing-place or wharf
AAcross 20: A sausage-like mass originally, later a sweet or savoury steamed dish such as clootie dumpling, roly-poly, spotted dick or suet pastry pie
AAcross 23: From the Latin for “ring”, a Roman arena for chariot races and gladiatorial combats; a round tent or big top for a company of acrobats and clowns; or, a rounded space in a town
AAcross 25: Gins or snares; doors in pigeon lofts; clay-hurling devices in skeet; or, light pony-drawn carriages
AAcross 28: From the Latin for “first, chief”, a headmaster/mistress; a leading actor, dancer or instrumentalist; or, one of the combatants in a duel
AAcross 30: Forename of Baroness Rendell of Babergh who wrote about Inspector Reg Wexford of Kingsmarkham
AAcross 32: The cavaedium in an ancient Roman domus, open to the sky; a colonnaded court or quadrangle of a medieval church; or, a glass-roofed central hall of a modern building
AAcross 34: Traditional handmade often collectable toy marbles of carnelian, chalcedony or of variegated glass resembling said banded quartz
AAcross 35: A bend, cat’s-paw, hitch, overhand or other rope splice; an ornamental ribbon such as a rosette; a tangle of hair, string etc; or, a bond of union
AAcross 36: With yellow flowers or downy “clocks”, a plant whose name derives from its jagged leaves reminiscent of the teeth of the “king of beasts”
AAcross 38: Associated with a phrase referring to any rough-and-ready practical method, the pollex of a manus; or, the breadth of said digit, as an approximate measure of one inch
AAcross 40: The bail or grip of a bucket, cup, mug, utensil etc that takes its name from the extremity used to hold said part; the tactile qualities of a textile; or, a slang term for one’s name
AAcross 41: From the Greek for “close the eyes”, an ancient secret ceremony witnessed only by the initiated; an old word for a craft or a trade guild; an enigmatic person or thing; or, a novel, play etc based on a puzzling crime
AAcross 44: An arbor adopted as a symbol of lineage and depicted in a chart showing the branching of a family
AAcross 46: An act of moving swiftly on foot whilst undergoing the punishment of the gauntlet, for example
AAcross 47: From the Arabic for “sherbet” and source of “sorbet”, a sugary liquid used for drinks, drizzling on ice cream, preserving fruit or for sweetening
AAcross 48: The velvety pink colour of a fragrant old rose of the same name; or, a heavy silk or linen fabric with a reversible monochromatic Jacquard-woven pattern
AAcross 50: Chimes worn by grazing Alpine cattle; or, similar instruments without clappers used in music or for encouraging racing cyclists/skiers
AAcross 52: From the Latin for “little feather”, a plume or tuft in a soldier’s helmet; knightly splendour; or, a dashing manner, flamboyance or swagger
AAcross 53: From the Old French for “hear ye”, one of a town crier’s three calls for attention prior to a proclamation
AAcross 54: A ledge of rock; a submarine terrace; a sandbank; or, one of the horizontal planks in a bookcase
AAcross 55: Latin word for honey
AAcross 56: A registered logo, symbol, word or combination thereof that uniquely identifies a company or product; or, any distinguishing characteristic
DDown 1: Village in West Yorkshire, site of a house designed by John Carr for Edwin Lascelles that is renowned for its Robert Adam interiors and Thomas Chippendale furniture
DDown 2: From an Old Norse word for a type of blouse, garments hanging from waists; or, parts of dresses, frock-coats etc reminiscent of these
DDown 3: A current of cool air; a quantity drunk in one breath; a catch of fish; depth of water needed to float a ship; a sketch; or, a dose of medicine
DDown 4: Nicknamed the “Pearl of Dorset”, a coastal town near the site of fossilist Mary Anning’s discovery of the first specimen of ichthyosaurusLYME REGIS
DDown 5: Holy water fonts near main doors of churches; or, a dialect word for beakers, buckets, flagons or posts
DDown 6: Trodden tracks/trails; neural routes of sensory impulses to the brain; or, figurative courses of action
DDown 7: Any one of a “bouquet” or “nye” of gallinaceous game fowls hunted seasonally from October 1 to February 1, ubiquitous in the British countryside but native to Asia
DDown 8: A Hindu ceremony of lights
DDown 9: Word for a Persian king’s ornamental headdress originally, later a woman’s richly jewelled diadem
DDown 12: Person or thing that is additional or beyond the usual, such as a spear carrier/supernumerary in a film or a newspaper supplement printed outside a normal printing cycle
DDown 19: From the French word “carré”, for “square”, a square-headed bolt for an arbalest/crossbow; a square tile; a square- or diamond-shaped pane; or, in another sense, a squabble
DDown 21: A perpendicular goalpost, stake, stone, stroke etc; a tool for basketry; a type of chair with a straight back; or, a piano with vertical strings
DDown 22: Metal spikes with heads struck with hammers or figuratively hit when identifying exact answers
DDown 24: A cross; a southern constellation symbolised by said figure; a vital point or stage; a baffling problem or puzzle; or, the hardest point of a climb
DDown 26: From the French meaning “stirrup for jumping into the saddle”, a long necklace of seed pearls or other gems ending in a tassel or pendant
DDown 27: Word for a cloth-stretching device originally, later a manger for hay; or, a stand for hats, plates, toast etc
DDown 29: A miniature Japanese carving used as a toggle for a kimono
DDown 31: Energy measured in BTU, calories or joules; or, a spicy quality in food
DDown 32: Clergyman and keen modeller whose interest in trains inspired him to pen the Railway Series of booksAWDRY
DDown 33: With phases indicated on the faces of some types of wristwatches, Earth’s only natural satellite
DDown 37: Single-reed instruments developed in the 17th century by adding two keys to the chalumeau, first used in a concerto by Mozart
DDown 39: Blue tits, goldcrests, greenfinches and other avians collectivelyBIRD-LIFE
DDown 40: Word originally meaning easy to use, later good-looking or striking
DDown 42: From the Italian for “somersaults”, revolving drums from which tickets are drawn in raffles at fairs or fêtes
DDown 43: A dish offered in addition to a main menu; a correspondent reporting on a particular story; the article dispatched; or, a bargain
DDown 45: Radices anchoring plants; or, one’s ancestry, belonging or origin
DDown 47: Petal-like leaves of a calyx
DDown 48: A type of combustion engine or the oil fuelling it; or, snakebite with a dash of blackcurrant cordial
DDown 49: A thick cut of beef, such as that knighted by James I and named “Sir Loin”, according to legend
DDown 51: Honey-producing pollinators traditionally told of events such as the death of their keeper or a birth
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