Telegraph Giant General Knowledge Answers - Saturday, 6th May 2023 There are 34 across clues and 30 down clues for the Telegraph Giant General Knowledge crossword on Saturday, 6th May 2023. View the answers below.. Also try..All Telegraph Giant General Knowledge AnswersAll PublicationsThe AnswersNumber# Clue Answer AAcross 9: Known to the Saxons as “Tri-Milchi”, in recognition of cows being milked thrice daily due to an abundance of lush verdant pasture, the name of the spring month containing BeltaneMAYAAcross 10: Featuring in the rocaille rockwork of grottoes and later in aspects of rococo, the “coquilles” or “conchiglie” of angel wings, cockles, jingles, periwinkles, volutes, wentletraps and other marine molluscsSEASHELLSAAcross 11: Word, related to the name of a cereal crop and of a unit of land, for any wild fruit or nut originally, later a specific cupule-borne forest fruit, squirrel snack and chief form of pig mast from which an oak tree growsACORNAAcross 13: From the Latin for “clear”, a word used to mean fair, pure or unclouded, as of the sky or the air; calm, peaceful and tranquil; or, as part of a royal title, honouredSERENEAAcross 14: Artist John Egerton Christmas who painted The Englishman’s Home for the Festival of Britain, designed stained glass and collaborated with John Betjeman, Geoffrey Grigson and Ben Nicholson, among othersPIPERAAcross 15: From the Latin for “high”, elevation above a datum line/sea level; angular distance of a celestial body above Earth’s horizon; or, by extension, loftiness of rank or any great heightALTITUDEAAcross 16: Gravitational force by which a body is attracted to Earth; a unit used to measure said heaviness; boldness of a typeface; a metal block used with a balance; or, density of clothWEIGHTAAcross 18: An instrument with a sharp point likened to the hole-boring beak of a green woodpeckerAWLAAcross 19: Burrows, dens, fortresses, setts and other retreats of wild animals; enclosures for beasts; or, secret boltholes for hiding or seclusionLAIRSAAcross 20: Word for funny stories, pranks or tricks originally, later dolls, jigsaw puzzles, teddy bears, tin soldiers, train sets and other playthings; or, dogs, replicas etc in miniatureTOYSAAcross 21: From the Arabic for “reunion of broken parts” or “bone-setting”, a method of calculation using letters/ symbols to represent numbersALGEBRAAAcross 24: Old word for an actor; a horse for pulling a passenger/mail-coach; or, an old hand, veteran or other adept of much worldly experienceSTAGERAAcross 25: Word, from the Italian for “antique” meaning “grotesque” in reference to fantastic architectural carvings of faces à la mode at the time, for absurd acts or ludicrous capersANTICSAAcross 28: A musical wind instrument fashioned from brass or a conch; an antenna of a beetle; an antler of a deer; a tentacle of a snail; a tip of a crescent; or, a symbol of a cuckoldHORNAAcross 29: Earth goddess whose name, at the suggestion of William Golding, was applied by James Lovelock to a hypothesis of self-regulationGAIAAAcross 30: A jolt; a swelling; a sleeping policeman; a knock of a boat in a rowing race; or, a customary throw or lift in the air of a birthday boy or girlBUMPAAcross 32: Self-styled “Palladio of patisserie” who advanced haute cuisine, illustrated his own cookery-books and created pièces montéesCAREMEAAcross 34: A chalk-like stick of pigment; a work of art created with such a crayon; a soft or muted colour such as baby blue, duck egg, lavender, peach or powder pink; or, woadPASTELAAcross 36: Tragedian noted for his portrayal of Shakespearean villains and for his histrionic spat with the father of Abraham Lincoln’s assassin, Junius Brutus BoothKEANAAcross 37: Abbreviation of an order made against one who has engaged in an antisocial act such as misuse of fireworks, nuisance calls, rowdiness, street drinking or vandalismASBOAAcross 38: A wavering cry of an owl; a parp of a steam whistle or the instrument described in 28 Across; a jeer; a jot; or, a hilarious escapade or personHOOTAAcross 40: — VI, son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour who reigned as king for six years until his death, aged 15EDWARDAAcross 42: Word used to mean important, powerful, strapping, strong or valiant; or, informally, very/to a high degreeMIGHTYAAcross 43: From the Greek for “contest” or “prize”, a sportsperson such as a competitor in track and field; or, any person of exceptional fitnessATHLETEAAcross 45: Short word for a two-wheeled vehicle with a human for an engine; or, Scots dialect for a nest or swarm of ants, hornets, wasps or wild beesBIKEAAcross 47: From an Old Norse name for the razorbill, a term for a dovekie, guillemot, puffin or other aukALCIDAAcross 48: Hardy cereal grass with grains used for crispbread, pumpernickel, whisky or animal fodder; or, a Romany word for gentlemanRYEAAcross 49: From the French for “sadness” or “poverty”, a bidding player’s attempt to lose every trick in solo whistMISEREAAcross 51: Substance from which something is made; cloth, fabric or textile; jokes, songs etc comprising a performer’s act; or, the facts, ideas, notes etc collected as the basis of a bookMATERIALAAcross 53: From the Latin for “12th part”, like the inch, a word for 1/12 of an imperial pound; or, any modicumOUNCEAAcross 54: From an Arabic word once used as a collective term for all citruses, lime-like fruits with which James Lind helped to conquer scurvyLEMONSAAcross 56: Peter Sallis’s character Norman in Last of the Summer WineCLEGGAAcross 57: Meaning “to slide”, the sweep of a finger along adjacent piano keys or harp strings; or, a similar effect produced on a tromboneGLISSANDOAAcross 58: Word invoking a united cheer; the scarlet fruit of a wild rose; or, a coxaHIPDDown 1: Unit of data comprising twice as many binary digits as a nibbleBYTEDDown 2: Word for a climb up but also a going back in ancestry or in timeASCENTDDown 3: Fictional prince crowned King of Narnia with the help of Aslan and the Pevensie siblings in the chronicles penned by C S LewisCASPIANDDown 4: Word, from the Italian for “dish of onions”, for a small thin sausageCHIPOLATADDown 5: From “flower-gathering”, a collection of blooms, either real or illustrated in a book; or, a literary anthology, garland or spicilegeFLORILEGIUMDDown 6: Apple, fig, pear or other fruit tree “shouldered” on a trellis where it is trained to grow flat against a wallESPALIERDDown 7: Italian term for a free-form musical piece improvised according to the dictates of a composer’s imagination; or, a potpourri of popular melodiesFANTASIADDown 8: Word for an arrow originally, later a jagged flash of lightning with a simultaneous crash of thunder; a roll of cloth; a dash; or, a pin for a nutBOLTDDown 9: From a name of a memory goddess, one’s power of remembranceMNEMEDDown 12: Blytonian companion of Big Ears; a tern whose genus Anous means “stupid” or “foolish”; the ancestor of cribbage; or, the jack in this gameNODDYDDown 17: To garner leftover harvested grain; or, to gather facts, bit by bitGLEANDDown 20: Word for a guardian originally, later a private coach, instructor or mentor; or, a book of instructionsTUTORDDown 22: One of a “leap” of big cats with coats marked with proverbial unchanging spots called rosettesLEOPARDDDown 23: Looked upon by the Witch Head Nebula, the bright blue supergiant in Orion the Hunter’s “foot”RIGELDDown 26: From the French for “stewed fruit”, humus or mulch used as fertiliserCOMPOSTDDown 27: Stack of hay or straw with a thatch; or, a wrench to one’s back or neckRICKDDown 31: A col; a sally of wit; a season ticket; a visa; or, an amorous advancePASSDDown 32: A patch for mending; a nail for securing roofing felt; a target for long-distance shooting in archery; a biff or cuff with a hand; or, power or influence in business/politicsCLOUTDDown 33: A campion in bloom during the months when cuckoos call, hence the latter part of its Latin name floscuculi meaning “flower of the cuckoo”RAGGED ROBINDDown 35: A path, route or way taken; a footprint; a vestige; or, a scarcely detectable amount of rainTRACEDDown 38: Peaks ranging in size from Marilyn and mountain to mole moundHILLSDDown 39: Liquorice-flavoured spice derived from an étoile-shaped seed of a tree in the “seductive” genus IlliciumSTAR ANISEDDown 41: Pictures produced/portrayed in pencils or pens rather than paintsDRAWINGSDDown 42: Scientific study of fungiMYCOLOGYDDown 44: Manorial land retained by a lord for his own use and not let to tenantsDEMESNEDDown 46: Forename of either a master of the mint who discovered gravity, a vegetarian teetotaller who invented a system of shorthand or an actor who invented a sewing machineISAACDDown 49: Word used to mean juicy, ripe or sweet, as of fruit; well matured, as of wine; soft, as of colour/sound; kind through old age; or, genially drunkMELLOWDDown 50: A sportsperson’s momentumgathering approach sprint before bowling, jumping, vaulting etcRUN-UPDDown 52: “Twinkling” organs referred to as the “windows to the soul”; or, holes in needles or Swiss cheeseEYESDDown 55: New Zealand author of numerous books for children including Leaf Magic and A Lion in the MeadowMAHY