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brendan

27th November 2021, 22:18
Yes, it's an SI unit.
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whetstone

27th November 2021, 22:20
Ah yes, that Henry for inductance.... I thought it was a king thing.
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whetstone

27th November 2021, 22:21
I think that's the latest batch all explained... cheers for the help. 👍
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whetstone

4th December 2021, 11:11
10a. Habituate to charge mostly put by male
ACCUSTOM
15a. Finally fall out of fashion, so face problem
STYE
5d Another author from Jane Austen's family, say
BENNETT
1a. Expertise listened to? Not at all commonly
NOHOW
22a. Short- in general, two and a quarter inches
THUMBNAIL
26a. Pious language used by reprobate- its a trick
CANTRIP
2d. Punk has to guard against misfortune
TOUCHWOOD
4d. 7 nameless children sorted out- about time
ELDRITCH
(7 down was EERIE)
14d. In haste, bishop produces a name
CELEBRITY
17d. Landlord who used to be a taxman
PUBLICAN
18d. Children's writer who makes a slip intentionally?
POTTER
20d. Pact is broken- it produces ripples
CAT'S PAW

Parses for the above please. Thanks
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malone

4th December 2021, 11:17
10 Accus(e), charge mostly, alongside /put by Tom, male.

15 The L, last letter in 'fall' drops out of Style, fashion.
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chrise

4th December 2021, 11:18
Difficult!
5d refers to Arnold Bennett and the Bennet family in Pride and Prjudice.
18d
Slip is something to do with pot-making - is it the clay the potter starts with?
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chrise

4th December 2021, 11:19
1 sounds like KNOWHOW (expertise)
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malone

4th December 2021, 11:20
26 Cant, pious language, Rip, reprobate.
14 Celerity is Haste, add B, bishop.
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chrise

4th December 2021, 11:21
14 haste is CELERITY
A PUBLICAN was an old name for a tax collector, I think
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jono

4th December 2021, 11:53
4d anagram of children* without the n (nameless), about T (time). Eerie is the defn.

Yes, the tax collector in 17d was a Roman.
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