| RUELLE | A narrow Parisian lane or alley between French buildings, thus the space between a bed and the wall in an opulent bedroom; or, a fashionable or aristocratic lady's social boudoir space for morning rec |
| EDIFICE | Word for a large or imposing building, thus a complex organisation or elaborate system of beliefs (7) |
| CHATEAUX | French cat water linked to ten French buildings! (8) |
| GINNELS | In northern England, alleys between high walls/buildings (7) |
| SIDESTREET | Small city lane or alley (4,6) |
| WERETEN | "There .... ... in the bed and the little one said, 'Roll over' "(The Wiggles) (4,3) |
| BERM | Word for a narrow space between a ditch and a parapet, but also a wall of sand for defence in a desert; or, a grassy verge, ledge or path beside a road (4) |
| GAP | An opening, such as a breach in a fortification's wall; a col; or, a space between a train and a platform (3) |
| TRACTION | Word for draught, drawing or pulling and one from which a farm vehicle derives its name; the grip of a tyre on a lane; or, the propulsion of vehicles (8) |
| GULLY | Small ravine or valley cut by running rainwater; or, a channel or gutter at either side of a tenpin bowling lane or skittles alley (5) |
| HEDGEROW | With leaves that fall in the winter providing dormice, toads,"urchins" and other wildlife a warm place to hibernate, a line of wild shrubs and occasional small trees bordering a field, lane or road (8 |
| ETON | Founded by Henry VI, a boarding school for boys in Berkshire where a crushed meringue pudding, a version of fives and the wall game originated (4) |
| CRYSTALLINESPHERE | The space between the fixed stars and the primum mobile once said to explain precession of the equinoxes |
| ALLEY | A narrow lane or passage, especially between or behind buildings (5) |
| LOKE | Norfolk or Suffolk dialect for a blind alley, cul-de-sac, grass-covered track, narrow lane or private road (4) |
| ABBE | A French member of the clergy in a bed and breakfast in Adelaide outskirts |
| LPS | Pink Floyd's "The Dark Side of the Moon" and "The Wall" |
| SPANDREL | What is the space between the shoulders of adjoining arches and the ceiling above? (8) |
| HUMANBODY | In 3.4, which goes back and forth between French and English, what subject is Alice teaching Katherine about? |
| VALLEY | The space between The Hill's vantage point and the back street (6) |