Actress Noblezada of "Hadestown" / MON 12-1-25 / Emu relative / Supercomputer precursor / Country where sticky rice is a staple / "Remedy" for a riled-up person / Hip person, in old slang / Third-smallest country in the world (eight square miles) / "You should come foraging with me, because I'm a ___" (bad pun)
Monday, December 1, 2025
Constructor: Hannah Binney
Relative difficulty: Medium (solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- CHILL PILL (17A: "Remedy" for a riled-up person)
- FROZEN ACCOUNT (24A: Penalty for bank fraud)
- COOL CAT (40A: Hip person, in old slang)
- POLAR OPPOSITE (51A: Antithesis)
Nauru, officially the Republic of Nauru, formerly known as Pleasant Island, is an island country and microstate in the South Pacific Ocean. It lies within the Micronesia subregion of Oceania, with its nearest neighbour being Banaba (part of Kiribati) about 300 kilometres (190 mi) to the east.
With an area of only 21 square kilometres (8.1 sq mi), Nauru is the third-smallest country in the world, larger than only Vatican City and Monaco, making it the smallest republic and island nation, as well as the smallest member state of the Commonwealth of Nations by both area and population. Its population of about 10,800 is the world's third-smallest (not including colonies or overseas territories). Nauru is a member of the United Nations, the Commonwealth of Nations, and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
Settled by Micronesians circa 1000 BC, Nauru was annexed and claimed as a colony by the German Empire in the late 19th century. After World War I, Nauru became a League of Nations mandate administered by Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. During World War II, Nauru was occupied by Japanese troops and was bypassed by the Allied advance across the Pacific. After the war ended, the country entered into United Nations trusteeship. Nauru gained its independence in 1968. At various points since 2001, it has accepted aid from the Australian Government in exchange for hosting the Nauru Regional Processing Centre, a controversial offshore Australian immigration detention facility. As a result of heavy dependence on Australia, some sources have identified Nauru as a client state of Australia.
Nauru is a phosphate-rock island with rich deposits near the surface, which allowed easy strip mining operations for over a century. However, this has seriously harmed the country's environment, causing it to suffer from what is often referred to as the "resource curse". The phosphate was exhausted in the 1990s, and the remaining reserves are not economically viable for extraction. A trust established to manage the island's accumulated mining wealth, set up for the day the reserves would be exhausted, has diminished in value. To earn income, Nauru briefly became a tax haven and illegal money laundering centre.
As a Downs-only experience, this wasn't too tough, except in the NE, where I got an extremely small country next to an actress I have never heard of (10D: Actress Noblezada of "Hadestown" = EVA). Not used to seeing actresses I've never heard of On A Monday, but ... I guess it happens. Shrug. Bummer to get shut out by what ends up being just another piece of crosswordese, but luckily I could infer all the letters of EVA with relative ease—that first letter was a total guess, but EVA seemed much more likely than IVA (a name that lives at the front of my mind because I've read The Maltese Falcon a million times, but one that is far less common than EVA irl, and in the grid). As for NAURU ... bah. Just couldn't dredge it up very easily. Had the terminal "U" but the only thing that came to mind was MACAU, which is a special administrative region in China, not a proper country. But once I got DIG IN and SLEPT into that corner, MACAU came out, and with MAGIC ACT in place, I could see GAUGE, and somehow that "U" jogged NAURU loose in my brain. No other part of the grid gave me any real trouble. It took a lot of inferred crosses for me to see MAINFRAME, but it often takes a lot of inferred crosses to see long Downs when you're solving Downs-only. Nothing unusual there.
Bullets:
- 14A: Ingredient in some smoothie bowls (ACAI) — so glad I didn't read the Across clues, because wtaf is a "smoothie bowl"??? I know what a smoothie is and I have at least heard of an ACAI bowl, but a "smoothie bowl." LOL at the phrase "some smoothie bowls," like I've been encountering them all my life and know them by subsets. Apparently this is some social-media-driven trend—eating with a spoon what you formerly just drank with a straw? Mkay. Enjoy. I'm gonna stick with oatmeal or granola with fruit, yogurt, nuts ... unblendered, thanks. I looked up "smoothie" bowls and half the descriptions feel like they were written by A.I. Are we sure "smoothie bowls" aren't actually an A.I. hallucination. Here is a representative description. Hopefully you see what I mean.
S
moothie bowls are trendy worldwide, providing both nutrition, the possibility to enjoy them, and endless creativity.- 59A: "You should come foraging with me, because I'm a ___" (bad pun) (FUNGI) — again, thank god I wasn't reading the Across clues. "You should come foraging with me," that's your premise / come-on line? No one who talks like this is, in fact, a fun guy. Also, the pun sucks on the page because FUNGI is a plural. Only guys named Gus may use this pun. "I'm a FUNGUS!" Sure you are...
- 69A: Sends an eggplant emoji, say (SEXTS) — no. stop. this is corny. I get that eggplant emoji means "dick" but I thought SEXTS were supposed to be actually sexy. Is anyone getting horny from looking at an eggplant emoji? That might make someone laugh, but I have trouble imagining it would turn anyone on. I would love to retire the word "SEXT/S" in general, as it moved from novel to overused long ago, but once OOXTEPLERNON (the god of short bad fill) gets a new and useful letter combination in his maw, it's hard to get him to let go.
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25 comments:
Harder than most Mondays. Never heard of a GRACENOTE, and CAGES didn't seem right. Didn't know MASA either, but trial-and-error did the trick.
I love puns, but FUNGI might be over the top (under the bottom?)
Wow Rex, picky, picky, picky. Maybe consider some sort of a CHILL PILL when it comes to the themes. This is CrossWorld after all. It’s not surprising that what you do for a living revolves around analysis of the written word and language in general.
I wonder if DEWY is a term that some people really use (other than to describe your lawn some mornings) - it looks kind of uncomfortable joining us on a Monday. And hopefully a fair number of us will recognize and welcome NAURU to our Monday soirée, lest it find itself sitting alone in a corner along with DEWY feeling out of place.
Personally, I could do without Eggplant emojis (and emoji’s in general - what a dumb concept).
I love smoothie bowls, they are usually thicker than smoothies almost sherbet- like
New to me 27A, I always thought of peruse as 'light', like browse ...
Up early, and I should make this quick. Solving Downs Only, had some trouble in the SE (RIFF, GRACE NOTE), and I finally did cheat there, alas. I did enjoy the revealer COLD FRONT, which is perhaps the best thing in the puzzle, although I write from a place of ignorance since I, er, ignored the Across clues.
Rex wondered about the origin of "stick out like a sore thumb". It all seems to be a bit speculative. But if you had a sore thumb, say for example if you whacked it hard with a hammer, then you might hold it out away from the rest of the hand, in which case it would stick out. Anyone who cursorily googles for an answer will find out that it seems to have emerged in US newspapers mid to late 19th century, but became popularized in the Perry Mason series of novels by Erle Stanley Gardner. Yada yada yada. (With Google, everyone can know the same things as anyone else, and seem as smart as anyone else, but only superficially. Lord help us with AI. It's an absolute pestilence because so much of it is unreliable [well, that's one aspect of it; there are many others], and you do realize, don't you, that the large LLMs only simulate intelligence -- fundamentally they don't understand what they are talking about. Rant over.)
It did occur to me that your thumb would be pretty sore, and a good angry red probably, if you were afflicted with gout in that joint. (The sources I saw regarding the sore thumb question don't mention gout -- I came up with that on my own.) Typically, gout presents in the big toe, but other joints can be affected. For some reason I thought gout was more a thing of the past than of today, but I could be wrong. What is known is that alcohol abuse is a major contributing factor, and boy howdy Americans consumed a great deal of alcohol in the 19th century. So perhaps sore thumbs were an unremarkable thing when the phrase appeared in newspapers back then? Who the hell knows. I don't.
And with that, I should get a start on my day. Have a good one!
Yes, people use DEWY as in dewy-eyed.
Popped down Glissando from just the G on 36D, which extended my usual Monday time by a minute or two.
Smoothie bowls are a thing, Rex
But should they be
Apparently I have been misinterpreting that for like the last 50 years as well !
Good laugh this morning Rex. Thanks for starting off the week with a grin.
Glen Laker, you’re not alone. Let’s make that downward glissando a sad trombone sound—wah, wah, wah.
I must try some smoothie bowls since, definitionally, I will have "the possibility to enjoy them."
Was anyone else bothered by including both OIL DRUM and OILER? On the other hand, I liked seeing PADS (as clued) and EDIT beside each other.
Surprised Rex didn’t mention the OILDRUM / OILER dupe
I was really surprised if this theme has not been done several times. But also, I'm surprised it was accepted now. I feel like 'front only' themes are now frowned upon - you need an extra twist.
I actually like this theme type, though. I wish NYT ran more of them.
Why are foragers trustworthy? They have good morels.
Hey All !
COOL puz. (You knew I couldn't pass that up!)
Liked it. Simple, done with EASE. No qualms with the fill.
Not verbose this morning, so that's all you get. Har.
Have a great Monday!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
I liked seeing PERUSE, a word with two contrary meanings – a contronym – sharing the box with POLAR OPPOSITE.
PERUSE is not alone in our magnificent quirky language. Other words of the same ilk are “garnish” (add or withhold), “sanction” (approval or penalty), and “seed” (remove or add seeds).
There was more to like in the box as well. A watery subtheme, with PIER, OAR, DEWY, a backward TIDE, and wannabe SERF. CAT crossing ACT. Long-O enders to counter the icy starters – ECHO, MEMO, ALSO, ECO, ZERO. And PADS, combined with (COOL) CAT, reminded me of TOE BEANS, a lovely answer from Hanna’s last puzzle.
FUNGI. My latest food-love discovery – mushroom jerky. It’s a thing. I found it at our farmer’s market, and it’s yummy and satisfying to the core, at least to me. Do you like savory, spicy, and GNAW-able? Mushroom jerky.
Thank you, Hannah, for all these day-lifting pings!
My five favorite original clues from last week
(in order of appearance):
1. Amazon wrapper (3)
2. Prepared statement? (2)(5)
3. Drive around the office (4)(5)
4. Volume of tourists (6)(5)
5. Musical production that might include grunts, groans, thwops, snorts and barks (9)
BOA
I'M READY
WORK ETHIC
TRAVEL GUIDE
WHALESONG
My favorite encore clues from last week:
[Plant eater] (5)(7)
[Take it back!] (4)(7)
VENUS FLYTRAP
TIME MACHINE
In the right hands, an eggplant emoji can be very effective in a sexting exchange. 😉
And the verb "to table", which here in US means put off for later, and in the UK means to address immediately!
Yes, the wonderful world of contranyms! I'll add "cleave" to that (it can mean "stick/adhere [to]", and it can also mean "split away [from]").
Speaking of POLAR OPPOSITE: what's the plural of antipode? Antipodepodes? Kidding.
This is the first paragraph of the late Bart Giamatti's "The Green Fields of the Mind" on baseball. The "chill rains" made it pop into my head today.
It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time, to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all twilight, when you need it most, it stops. Today, October 2, a Sunday of rain and broken branches and leaf-clogged drains and slick streets, it stopped, and summer was gone.
Same here! Can’t believe I thought that word meant it’s complete opposite for 40 years.
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