| UNDERLING | A junior |
| NAMESAKE | A junior |
| REDBAG | A barrister's burgundy cloth holdall for robes and wigs, presented by a KC/QC to a junior in recognition of their contribution to a case (3,3) |
| COLT | Male counterpart of a filly; or, a member or a junior sports team (4) |
| CUB | A young bear, fox, lion or wolf; a novice; or, a junior Scout (3) |
| HOUSEMAN | A recent graduate in medicine holding a junior resident post in a hospital (8) |
| FAG | Term for a boring, wearisome or unwelcome task; drudgery; or, traditionally in British public schools, a junior boy forced to do menial chores for a senior pupil or prefect (3) |
| GOFER | A junior assistant, a dogsbody (5) |
| SOPH | One junior to a junior, casually |
| TRE | Nickname for a junior's junior |
| TREY | Nickname for a junior's junior |
| FEALTY | Duty of a citizen is to be winsome about a junior officer (6) |
| BROWNIE | Cake in the form of a dense, fudgy, chocolate square with chopped walnuts; or, a junior Girl Guide with leaders and assistant leaders named after owls (7) |
| BAJRA | Millet from a junior in a college class (5) |
| ENSIGN | After three hands, have a good name for a junior officer (6) |
| BADGER | Sett-dwelling animal known as a brock; or, a junior member of St John Ambulance (6) |
| PAPA | What a junior might call a senior |
| CUBAN | A junior Scout with an inhabitant of a Caribbean island (5) |
| COED | A sophomore or a junior, e.g. |
| MONTGOMERY | British soldier who began his career as a junior officer and ended a Field Marshal (10) |