| WHATHO | Bertie Wooster expression thought to be derived in part from Beowulf's "hwaet" |
| EIDER | Source of down clue I derived in part |
| ETHS | Start from hwaet in unusual set letters in Beowulf, eg |
| POTENZ | German word for power, from which the p in pH (pH scale etc.) is thought to be derived (6) |
| ETNA | Name thought to be derived from the Phoenician for "furnace" |
| DRAUGHTS | Strategy board game for two players, thought to be derived from the Roman game of Latruncula (8) |
| APRIL | Month whose name is said to be derived from the Latin for "to open" |
| JEEVES | Gentleman's gentleman to Bertie Wooster in books by P.G. Wodehouse (6) |
| JEEVESIAN | Of, or relating to, the fictional valet of literary character Bertie Wooster (9) |
| AUNT | Dahlia or Agatha, to Bertie Wooster, e.g. (4) |
| TURNOFPHRASE | Seraph could be derived from this mode of expression! (4,2,6) |
| IQSCORE | No. calculated in part from performance on logic and reasoning tasks |
| ENNUI | All of a sudden nuisances will suffer in part from boredom (5) |
| DIRTYBOMB | Obscene fortune one's made, in part, from toxic waste (5,4) |
| CHEEP | Headache, epileptic noted, resulted in part from bird's call |
| WODEHOUSE | P G ___, author whose creations include Bertie Wooster and Jeeves (9) |
| RIGHTHOJEEVES | A Bertie Wooster book by P. G. Wodehouse (5,2,6) |
| FROMBADTOWORSE | Even more terribly mad for opening of Bertie Wooster novel (4,3,2,5) |
| PGWODEHOUSE | Comic writer and creator of Bertie Wooster (1,1,9) |
| OLDBEAN | How Bertie Wooster might address a chum? (3,4) |