| FLITCH | Old dialect word for a side of bacon (6) |
| OFFSHOOT | Word for a side branch of a tree or other plant, thus for anything that develops from a main stem (8) |
| KEMP | An old dialect word for a contest in reaping or other work; a champion; or, from "whisker, moustache", a coarse dye-resistant fibre or strand in wool (4) |
| GRICE | An object collected or place visited by a railway enthusiast in the hobby of ferroequinology; or, an old dialect word for a little pig or young swine (5) |
| GAMMON | Bottom piece of a side of bacon (6) |
| SILVER | Money for a side of beef? (6) |
| JUMPER | From old dialect for a short coat, a word for a pullover or sweater (6) |
| SPENCE | Old dialect or Scots word for a cottage parlour; a buttery, larder, pantry or other storeroom for victuals and domestic equipment; or, a monetary allowance (6) |
| THIBLE | First woman to fly in a free-floating hot-air balloon; or, a dialect word for a stick for stirring broth or porridge (6) |
| CUSHAT | Scottish dialect word for a wood pigeon (6) |
| DINGLE | Dialect word for a dell, small sylvan valley or wooded hollow (6) |
| WIZARD | Model name used by Hillman from 1931 to 1934 for a side-valve six cylinder saloon (6) |
| PATOIS | Irishman is conserving old dialect (6) |
| RIGHTWING | Ice hockey position named for a side of the rink |
| SHAW | An old or dialect word for a copse, thicket or woodland; Scots for the leafy top of a potato/turnip; or, an assumed name of Lawrence of Arabia (4) |
| HOLT | Term for a fortress/keep originally, later a dialect word for a grasp or grip; an otter's riverbank couch, den or lair; a refuge; or, from "twig", a copse, orchard, wood or wooded hill (4) |
| MAHOGANY | Wood traditionally used by cabinetmakers; informal word for a dining table; old dialect for gin and treacle; or, brandy and water (8) |
| WICK | Old or dialect word for a creek, farm, hamlet or village; or, a cord that supplies fuel to a candle or oil lamp's flame by capillary action (4) |
| INGLE | From Scottish Gaelic for "light, fire" and Irish for "live ember", a dialect word for a fire, fireplace, flame or hearth (5) |
| FLANK | Word, in the context of an animal, body, chessboard, hill, military formation or rugby pitch, for a side (5) |