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Telegraph Giant General Knowledge Answers - Saturday, 29th July 2023

There are 34 across clues and 32 down clues for the Telegraph Giant General Knowledge crossword on Saturday, 29th July 2023. View the answers below..

The Answers

Number# Clue Answer
AAcross 9: From the Latin for “block of wood”, a manuscript volume, such as the 10th-century Exeter Book comprising around 100 riddles and an anthology of some 40 poems including The Seafarer and The Wanderer
AAcross 10: From the Italian for “little pigs” or “piglets”, champagne cork-shaped wild edible ceps, “kings of mushrooms” or penny-buns that are highly prized by chefs and foragers
AAcross 11: A bend in a road; a swindle; a silk thread; a mixed drink; a spiral-shaped barley sugar, roll of bread/tobacco, sliver of lemon zest or wineglass stem; or, a style of hip-gyrating dance
AAcross 13: Vessel for rowing or sailing said to “turn turtle” when capsized; or, a jug or saucière, shaped like said watercraft, from which to pour gravy or other such condiment
AAcross 14: Word denoting an alfresco activity such as camping, canoeing, clam-digging, climbing, cold-water swimming or cycling, or a person fond of such sporting or leisure pursuits
AAcross 15: A migration of salmon or other fish upstream; a downward trickle of paint; a track made or used by a particular animal; or, a sprint, such as that when undergoing the punishment of the gauntlet
AAcross 16: A feathered vertebrate, such as the onomatopoeically named chachalaca, chickadee, chat, chiffchaff, corncrake, cuckoo or curlew; or, a shuttlecock
AAcross 17: An aspis, buckler, heater or targe; an escutcheon or trophy shaped like the third example; a French écu; or, something serving to protect, such as a chelonian’s carapace
AAcross 18: Nickname of the “chrysanth”, whose full name stems from Greek for “gold flower”; an informal name for one’s mater; noun meaning “silence”; or, an interjection calling for such
AAcross 20: The ritual of admitting a new member into a society or group in an often secret ceremony of the same name; or, any act of beginning
AAcross 22: A tizzy or sixpence; a quizzer or examiner; a canopy over a four-poster bed; or, a miniature pot of paint, a sample or a scent, for one to try
AAcross 25: From Latin meaning “to weave”, word for a rich cloth interwoven with gold or silver threads originally, later a disposable paper hankie
AAcross 27: A stockpile; a place to save or squirrel away said stash; a cow, pig, sheep or other beast being fattened for market; or, a supermarket or shop
AAcross 30: A fruit said to be in one’s mouth when one has an accent thought typical of English upper classes
AAcross 32: An eye’s choroid layer that takes its name from the Latin for “grape”, for its resemblance to said berry
AAcross 33: Blocks of chocolate or soap; ingots of gold; counters in cafés or pubs; or, metal rods, behind which prisoners are detained in jails
AAcross 35: A variety of quartz; or, a short word for the often pale blue stoneware perfected by Josiah Wedgwood
AAcross 37: From Arabic for “vault”, an arched niche in a room; or, a shady retreat, such as a bower or summerhouse or a recess in a garden hedge/wall, provided with seats
AAcross 38: Word for a tree originally, hence its survival in names of arbors including the “horn” and “white” species; or, a transverse timber of a ship, hence the greatest width of said vessel
AAcross 39: An excavation giving access to oil or water; a natural mineral spring; a nautical cockpit; a lift-shaft; or, an inkpot housed in a hole in a desk
AAcross 40: Forename of the author who created the character Velvet Brown, who wins the Grand National on a piebald horse won in a village raffle
AAcross 42: Pommes frites-like sticks of deep-fried potato, traditionally served in cones or parcels of newspaper; poker tokens; or, fragments of stone
AAcross 44: The nutlike kernel of a pastel-coloured sugar-panned dragée or comfit, often used as a confetto
AAcross 45: Drainpipes or gargoyles; nozzles, sparklers or swan necks for dispensing beer; pouring tubes of teapots; or, the blowholes or blowings of whales
AAcross 48: Philatelic book in which to house a collection of postage labels by means of gummed hinges or mountsSTAMP ALBUM
AAcross 51: Invisible “ether” forming the atmosphere and supporting all life on Earth; a light breeze; or, a melody
AAcross 52: Studied by a microscopist, a green alga whose presence in a pond, river or steam is often a bioindicator of fresh or unpolluted water
AAcross 54: A cross-like Egyptian hieroglyph representing the word “life” and symbolising life itself
AAcross 56: From the Latin for “two”, a piece of music composed for a brace, couple, pair or twain of pianists, opera singers, violinists or other performers of the same name
AAcross 57: A rhombus or diamond; or, a pastille/troche or heraldic charge in the shape of said geometric figure
AAcross 59: From the Sanskrit for “colour, tone”, a traditional Indian melodic type expressing a mood, season or time
AAcross 60: From the Greek for “revel”, a quality that arouses laughter or mirth; a humorist, joker or wit; or, a book or magazine with a series of funnies accompanied by fumetti
AAcross 61: A frozen cascade, such as that at Everest’s Khumbu GlacierICE FALL
AAcross 62: A collier; a type of insect that makes galleries in leaves; a blockchain validator in the realm of bitcoin and other cryptocurrency; or, a honeyeater in the genus Manorina
DDown 1: Tchaikovsky’s cursed swan queen in his classical ballet Swan LakeODETTE
DDown 2: City whose 922-year-old university hosts an annual tortoise fair where its colleges race their testudinal pets to the edge of a lettuce circle
DDown 3: From the Greek for “to cut short”, a summary or miniature form; or, a perfect example of something
DDown 4: The “Ship” constellation
DDown 5: Physicist whose metre-kilogram-second system of measurement formed the basis of SI unitsGIORGI
DDown 6: French word used to refer to a bibliopole or a bookseller
DDown 7: Items of kitchenalia forming a chef or cook’s batterie de cuisine
DDown 8: Word for a bodily organ originally, now for an arm, leg or wing
DDown 9: From the French for “hook”, handiwork executed in wool or other yarn with said implement
DDown 12: The trunk of a human body; or, a statue without a head/bust or the members described in 8 Down
DDown 19: From the Old English for “strength”, a word for power or force; the chief part; a principal cable, duct or pipe; or, the high sea or open ocean
DDown 21: Word for a bundle originally, later a bride’s clothes and linen collected in a dowry chest for her marriage
DDown 23: Word first for an ancient Greek drinking party with convivial discussion, later a conference
DDown 24: Composition or “study” intended to test or improve a player’s technique or virtuosity
DDown 26: A join between two pieces of cloth, wallpaper or wood, e.g.
DDown 28: Fragrant honey-coloured tree resin with a lemony piney aroma
DDown 29: Designer of the V&A’s façade
DDown 31: A pale violet or lavender colour evocative of a fragrant flower of the same name in the olive family
DDown 34: From “to sow”, a testa-encased plant embryo; a fragment of coral; a baby oyster; a crystal that initiates crystallisation; or, a bubble in glass
DDown 35: From the Persian for “rosewater”, a sweet herbal or medicated drink; or, a cocktail of bourbon and mint
DDown 36: Word for a tax or rent originally, later a croft, grange, ranch or other agricultural holding for cultivation
DDown 41: Ballerina immortalised in cream and meringue through the pudding that carries her surname, Pavlova
DDown 43: More commonly called a pomelo, the largest of all the citrus fruits
DDown 44: From “elixir of life”, “immortal”, the food of the gods in classical mythology; anything delicious, fragrant or sweet; or, bee-bread
DDown 46: Informal word for one regarded as lively, modern and social; a cricket ball that deviates sideways in flight; or, an off-centre gramophone record
DDown 47: A small wheel or castor; the act of rolling slowly; a wheeled bed; a quill of gold thread in heraldry; or, a hoop
DDown 49: A keynote; a stressed syllable in a word; quinine water to mix with gin; or, any restorative or pick-me-up
DDown 50: From dialect for “fool”, a hairstyle described by Chambers Dictionary as “short at the front, long at the back and ridiculous all round”
DDown 52: From Old English for “joy, music”, oneiric or somnial sequences of images, sensations and thoughts experienced during REM sleep
DDown 53: From Greek for “Pan-pipes”, the song-making organ of any one of the “orniths” described in 16 Across
DDown 55: The cannabis plant; or, its fibre
DDown 58: Sharing its root with “jealousy”, a word for intense or fanatical ardour; or, a herd or “dazzle” of zebra
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