| LYDNEY | A town or junction on the Dean Forest Railway (6) |
| JACOBI | Canadian who was a regular on the Dean Martin Show |
| NORCHARD | Headquarters of the Dean Forest Railway (8) |
| PARKEND | Northerly terminus of the Dean Forest Railway (7) |
| GIMLET | Does a U-turn on junction on the foreign motorway approaching midnight - presumably, it's the drink? (6) |
| KALUGA | Russian port and railway junction on the Oka River (6) |
| TEMPLE | ___ Hirst Junction, on the Selby Diversion (6) |
| DECANI | Section of a church choir occupied by the dean (6) |
| SPRAWL | A relaxed/ungainly slouching or lounging position; the haphazard growth of a town or city into adjoining countryside; or, any untidy mass (6) |
| DEACON | Evidently the dean would accept his company (6) |
| NEARED | They approached but the Dean hesitated (6) |
| REVUES | "The Dean Martin Show" and "The Carol Burnett Show" |
| DEMEAN | The dean met me only to debase me as a result |
| VEDUTA | From the Italian for "view", an artistic representation of a town or landscape, specifically one that is faithful or realistic enough to enable the location to be identified (6) |
| PARISH | A town or village having its own church and pastor/priest; its people or community; or, a district for administration purposes (6) |
| MIRREN | Voice of the dean in "Monsters University" |
| TURNING | Word for a bend, crossroads, curve or junction; the shaping of a vase or other crock in pottery; or, the action or skill of using a lathe (7) |
| OCTROI | Formerly, a tax levied in some European countries on goods entering a town or city; from French, 'to grant' (6) |
| BARRIO | A Spanish-speaking quarter of a town or city (6) |
| PUEBLO | A Spanish-language term referring to a town or other small settlement (6) |