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telescoper

28th April 2019, 22:02
Last one.

15 across.

Bowling, not full out? Being stiff one may come to this (4)

I have T-MB so it looks like TOMB but I don't get the wordplay. Any suggestions?
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rusty

28th April 2019, 22:12
There is a character in a book, and also a song called Tom Bowling.
Tom B(owling) ?
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telescoper

28th April 2019, 22:22
Interesting but how does 'not full out' work?
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rusty

28th April 2019, 22:27
Only part of the name is used.
Could that be "not full out" ?
Just a guess.
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kilgore trout

28th April 2019, 22:32
Chambers gives B as "Something or someone of the second class or order" so maybe B means "not A", not the best. "not full out"? So, TOM (Bowling)+B? Not totally sold on that, however.
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kilgore trout

28th April 2019, 22:34
Then again BRB gives "full out" as "total", so perhaps Rusty's thought is better.
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telescoper

28th April 2019, 22:37
Yes, I saw that but Chambers has 'full-out' with a hyphen and I'd expect Azed to be fussy about that!
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wintonian

28th April 2019, 22:40
Given Azed’s love of cricket, I suspect that “Bowling not full out” simply refers to TOM + B for bowled.
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jacknatter

28th April 2019, 22:46
‘Full out’ would be hyphenated when used prepositively but not when placed after the noun.
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