| LADRONE | A pirate in Spain or Spanish America (7) |
| HACIENDAS | Ranches or large estates in Spain or Spanish speaking countries (9) |
| INFANTA | A daughter of a ruling monarch in Spain or Portugal in the past (7) |
| CENTAVO | Small Spanish America coin (7) |
| PRIMERO | A 16th and 17th Century card game which originated in Spain or Italy (7) |
| CANTINA | Bar in Spain (or Star Wars) (7) |
| ALCALDE | Municipal office in Spain or South America |
| VOLCANO | Its origins in English can be traced to Italian (or Spanish but ultimately Latin). It describes, as Britannica defines it, a "vent in the crust of Earth or another planet or satellite, from which issu |
| AZULEJO | Glazed coloured tile in Spain or Portugal |
| CORDOBA | City in Spain or Argentina |
| AMOROSO | Italian, Latin or Spanish word for "loving", hence for music to be played tenderly; a male lover or ladies' man; or, lovingly aged dark sweet sherry (7) |
| PAPRIKA | Spice derived from a variety of sweet pepper, used to flavour/colour Hungarian or Spanish dishes such as goulash, chorizo and some types of fish stew (7) |
| PAISANS | To those of Italian or Spanish descent, friends or fellow countrymen |
| IBERIAN | Portuguese or Spanish |
| PEON | One held in servitude in Spanish America becomes a foot soldier in India |
| FANDANGO | A lively dance popular in Spain and Spanish America (8) |
| PRESIDIO | A fortified post or settlement in Spanish America (8) |
| ESTANCIA | A large estate or cattle ranch in Spanish America |
| HOOK | Tool for crochet; object used by an angler; a clasp paired with an eye; or, the name of a pirate in J. M. Barrie's Peter and Wendy (4) |
| RANCHERO | What, in Spanish America, do they call a cattle grazier (8) |