| OARLOCK | Camouflage or cloak what keeps the row steadily going (7) |
| BESIDES | Good Queen holding Cockney's cloak, what is more |
| MASK | Word, related to "buffoon, clown, ghost, jester, man in disguise", for a domino, false face, mudpack, visor or other camouflage or cover-up, typically revealing just one's eyes (4) |
| MANTEAU | Loose gown or cloak worn in the 17th and 18th centuries (7) |
| EGGCOSY | What keeps the place warm before soldiers enter? (3,4) |
| BUSPASS | What keeps the old folk mobile? |
| NEEDLES | The ---, row of three chalk stacks off the western extremity of the Isle of Wight (7) |
| HEFTIER | The fellow's getting loud and the row more vigorous (7) |
| DINGOES | The row disappears with the wild dogs (7) |
| ENDORSE | Guarantee the last Cockney nag in the row? (7) |
| HOGWASH | Grid that is further subdivided into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve the puzzle, each of the rows, columns and 3x3 boxes should contain all the digits from 1 to 9. The solution to this puzzle will be publish |
| EDITING | Job with paper, say, first in the row to go in (7) |
| RECLINE | Lie will be concerned with a hundred on the row (7) |
| RANKLED | The row that went before wasn't forgotten (7) |
| TESTIER | Is in France in the row more irritable (7) |
| MALLARD | Duck comes from the row of shops on a road |
| CHESTER | City known for its two-storey shops and dwellings called The Rows (7) |
| PETFENCE | What keeps the neighborhood from going to the dogs? |
| CROSSBEAM | What keeps the House united - unoriginal bomb scares, perhaps? (9) |
| GIRTH | Circumferential thickness is what keeps the saddle on (5) |