| ARTAL | Cunning needed to have a pound as a unit of weight |
| TEATOWEL | Have a pound to pay on bottle top and cloth (3,5) |
| ENSIGN | Two hands needed to have a pointer for a junior officer (6) |
| ETUI | The tuition needed to have a case for sewing materials |
| SOFTLY | Cunning needed to obtain old newspaper without fuss (6) |
| INFIDEL | One may be fined a pound as someone who rejects religion (7) |
| NORMAL | She takes a pound as usual (6) |
| AIRCRAFT | Cunning needed to fly them? (8) |
| STATECRAFT | Say the cunning needed for the art of government (10) |
| GRADE | A category of a listed building; a music exam; or, meaning "step", word originally used in English as a unit of measurement of angles, now for a particular level of quality, rank etc (5) |
| ROD | A slender shoot; an iron bar; a fishing-pole; the angler using this; a riding crop; a measuring staff; or, a perch/pole, as a unit of length/land (3) |
| BOLT | A roll of fabric or wallpaper as a unit of measurement; the world's fastest man; or, a flash of lightning (4) |
| PROVINCE | A territory governed as a unit of a country or empire (8) |
| ROUNDER | A complete run as a unit of scoring in an English team game similar to softball (7) |
| COIN | Small stamped disc of metal used as a unit of exchange (4) |
| THROB | Pound as a headache or a stubbed toe |
| RATEL | Be worth pounds, as a creature of the night |
| TON | A unit of weight equal to 2,240 lbs avoirdupois; an informal word for 100mph, £100 or a score of 100; or, with definite article, fashionable society during the Regency era (3) |
| TONNE | A unit of mass or a unit of weight (5) |
| PAIR | A brace of pheasants, a couple of hounds, a duo of singers, a husband and wife team or other set of two things regarded as a unit |