| DEWYEYED | Wet behind the ears -- and in front of them (4-4) |
| NOSE | Ear, ___, and throat (medical specialty) |
| FENNEC | Species of fox with unusually large ears, _ fox (6) |
| WARM | Earmuffs can keep a person's ears ___ on a snowy day Parents |
| ARE | "My ears ___ burning" |
| SIMPSON | There are statues showing this WWI Gallipoli hero and his donkey at his birthplace in the UK's South Shields and in front of Canberra's War Memorial |
| OBOES | In an orchestra, what would you find next to flutes and in front of bassoons? (5) |
| CROWBARS | They lift up and the birds can get a drink in them (4-4) |
| CATCHERS | They have a plate in front of them |
| OMNIVORE | One who'll eat what's in front of them |
| ITEMISES | Half-despises object put in front of them but catalogues it |
| GULLIBLE | I, for one, don't believe Government will bring in water charges for one wet behind the ears (8) |
| IMMATURE | A rum time, unfortunately, to be wet behind the ears |
| JUVENILE | Wet behind the ears |
| TENTPEGS | Some guys become attached to them (4-4) |
| ALSORANS | Solar flares? Answer: there's no place for them (4-4) |
| SICKNESS | In ____ And In Health, TV sitcom that was a sequel to Till Death Us Do Part (8) |
| CFCA | In 1922, the Star becomes a pioneer in broadcasting by establishing its own radio station _ _ _ _ ...and in 1923 it becomes the first radio station to broadcast a hockey game, launching the career of |
| YOUNGLADY | Miss what's wet behind the ears and noble (5,4) |
| NAIVE | In place of baptism, maybe, is one wet behind the ears? |