| OCH | A Scot's surprised expression (3) |
| CAM | The Granta in Cantabrigia upon which the May Bumps rowing races take place; a Scots word for blue-grey clay, pipeclay, a slate pencil or soft slate; or, from "comb, cogwheel", a rotating piece on a me |
| OON | A Scots form of oven? (3) |
| COO | This animal from a Scots farm has to be half-cooked (3) |
| BOWL | A biased orb rolled on a crown green; a cheese for skittles; a deep dish; a drinking cup; a lob in cricket; a natural basin; or, a Scots word for a marble (4) |
| POKE | A bonnet's brim; a bag, pocket or pouch; a jab; a keen end of a stick; a Facebook nudge/digital elbow; a Scots cornet of ice cream or cone of chips; or, a Hawaiian bowl of goodness (4) |
| FOOTER | A walker; a Scots word for a fiddle or potter about; an informal name for soccer; a kick of the ball in said game; or, type/text at the bottom of a page, in contrast to the header, at the top (6) |
| IWOJIMA | Am I a Scots endearment for a West Indian climber in the Pacific? (3,4) |
| CRASH | Sound of cymbals colliding; a mismatch of colours; a cumbersome coinciding of events; any clamour, collision, conflict or contradiction; or, a Scots word for chatter or clack (5) |
| ALASTAIR | A Scots name for a final melody |
| STRATHSPEY | A pretty sash for a Scots dance (10) |
| BEANO | A celebration party for a Scots comic (5) |
| GIBBON | Author who wrote A Scots Quair - a trilogy consisting of Sunset Song, Cloud Howe and Grey Granite (6 |
| GREYGRANITE | Try agreeing for a change in third part of A Scots Quair (4,7) |
| GREY | Try agreeing for a change in third part of A Scots Quair (4,7) |
| GRANITE | Try agreeing for a change in third part of A Scots Quair (4,7) |
| TAMAR | In the West Country, a Scots boy with a warm heart (5) |
| SELKIRK | Sell a Scots church, say, in a Borders town (7) |
| NEEP | A Scots and northern English word for a turnip, which influenced the name of the parsnip (4) |
| DISASSOCIATE | To detach (oneself) a is a Scots idea (anag) (12) |