| EXPLETIVE | Former student in fit of the sulks, I've produced swear-word (9) |
| IMPRESSIVE | I'm ahead of the media I've produced to be magnificent (10) |
| PET | Favourite; fit of the sulks |
| TOUT | A spy or informer; a fit of the sulks; a person who buys tickets to resell them for a profit; or, a tipster who secretly watches racehorses to gain profitable information (4) |
| HAROLDMACMILLAN | Injury confines former student in European football club, one with Devonshire connections (6,9) |
| ALUMNA | Former student in manual work (6) |
| CALUMNIES | Church's including former students in defamatory statements (9) |
| HEARTBURN | Try bergamot at first in fit of illness (indigestion) |
| PETULANCE | Criticise church taking instrument back in fit of pique |
| DEHISCENT | The man's tucked in - fit to burst! (9) |
| STEPNEY | Long fits of the sulks, being sent back here in London |
| PALATABLE | Pleasant friend engaged in fit |
| OUTBURST | In the open-air, exploded in fit of temper (8) |
| SNIT | US word for a British huff, hump, mope, pet, scene, strop, sulk or proverbial blow and a puff - a fit of the grumps when down in the dumps (4) |
| HUMP | From "lump of bread", word for a gibbosity on a camel or person's back, thus a fit of depression or the sulks, when one's back is up through annoyance or despondency (4) |
| PADDY | Land in East in fit of temper (5) |
| RAVAGE | Destroy version of Bible in fit of anger (6) |
| APOPLEXY | Father gets covered in beer by Yankee in fit of anger (8) |
| POUTNET | Scots trap blooming Nationalist in fit of sulks |
| TEMPER | Kind of paint girl's binned in fit of rage (6) |