| ORCA | A whale |
| FLIPPER | Forelimb of a whale, seal or turtle adapted for swimming; a television series about a dolphin; a swimfin; or, an arm of a pinball machine (7) |
| BLOWER | Informal word for a speaking tube or a telephone; a fan, leaf-blaster, supercharger or other device that produces a current of air; or, a whale (6) |
| SPOUT | A teapot's pouring tube; a waterfall; the blowing of a whale; or, a gargoyle for channelling rainwater (5) |
| HARPOONER | A funny brother, exceptional person who has "a whale of a time"? |
| SCHOOL | Where a pupil can have a whale of a time? (6) |
| BREACH | An infringement; a quarrel; a gap made in an enemy's fortifications by an attacking army; or, the act of a whale leaping clear of the water (6) |
| JONAH | Little Jon - a harpooner - is a whale of a guy! (5) |
| CETE | A sea monster; a whale; or, from "assembly", a company of badgers (4) |
| AHAB | In a novel, which captain lost a leg to a whale? (4) |
| MINNIE | Woman in a 1931 Cab Calloway song who had "a heart as big as a whale" (6,3,7) |
| THEMOOCHER | Woman in a 1931 Cab Calloway song who had "a heart as big as a whale" (6,3,7) |
| HUMPBACKLITTLESHEBA | A whale of a drama? |
| JAW | A whale has a |
| ORC | What is either a whale or a people-eating sea monster? (3) |
| ALEWIFE | Half a whale, the other half a fish |
| FLUKED | Had a stroke of luck to be struck by a whale? (6) |
| HARPOONED | Caught a whale, nag, two ducks and a small donkey (9) |
| DOLPHIN | Marine cetacean mammal that is smaller than a whale and larger than a porpoise |
| NARWHAL | Tusked mammal, a whale without a tail, ran back first (7) |