| CLOUGH | A northern English name for a ravine |
| THRUTCH | Northern English name for a ravine, such as one east of Waterfoot in Lancashire |
| GOWAN | Scottish and Northern English name for the wild daisy |
| WIGAN | Hairpiece put on at a northern English town (5) |
| ARARAT | A northern English vale runs up biblical mountain (6) |
| GORGE | Word for the throat or throttle, hence for a ravine or valley between hills, narrow like such a gullet (5) |
| NULLA | Indian word for a ravine or watercourse (5) |
| ARRAS | Old English name for a tapestry, derived from a town in northern France which exported many such wall hangings to England (5) |
| MALLOW | English name for a family of herbaceous plants that includes cotton, hibiscus, hollyhocks and okra, from which the colour mauve derives its name (6) |
| MADGE | Regional dialect or old English name for a barn owl or a magpie (5) |
| SWEET | English name for a bonbon (5) |
| EFT | Middle English name for a type of salamander |
| MYKONOS | English name for a Greek island, part of the Cyclades (7) |
| ELEGIES | English name for a set of solo piano pieces by the Italian composer Ferruccio Busoni, BV 249, first published in 1908 |
| YAFFLE | Thought to derive from its distinctive laughing call, old English name for a green woodpecker (6) |
| DYNAMOKIEV | The usual English name for a team which has always played in the top division of Soviet or Ukrainian football |
| ELSINORE | English name for a small port city in eastern Denmark (pop about 60,000) (8) |
| SARAGOSSA | English name for a city on the River Ebro in north-east Spain (9) |
| GULLY | A ravine or valley cut by rainwater; a channel at the side of a tenpin bowling lane; a gutter or storm drain; or, a fielding position in cricket (5) |
| CABLECAR | Small carriage for carrying people across a ravine, for example (5-3) |