| UNIMAGINABLE | Difficult to comprehend Bengali translation by, for example, Cambridge graduate |
| SERVERSIDE | Relating to operations by, for example, a web host rather than client |
| THERESAMAY | Article about PM's predecessor taken in by for example PM (7,3) |
| YARDS | Short distance GP covered by, for example, reversing |
| TRANSPORT | Tons managed by, for example, football coach? |
| IDEOGRAPHS | Papers from Oxford taken in by, for example, sharp mixture of smiley faces (10) |
| PIGINTHEMIDDLE | Game had by for example snowboarders |
| DEGAULLE | Plain English plugged by, for example, a former French leader (2,6) |
| OPERATION | +, -, x, or divided by, for example |
| UMBRAGE | Offence taken by, for example, Burma (7) |
| DATE | Fruit that has a sell-by, for example (4) |
| VAST | So huge as to be difficult to comprehend |
| CUBA | Island for a Cambridge graduate (4) |
| HOGWASH | Difficult to comprehend airman recruit against the N American T-6 (7) |
| ABOVEONESHEAD | Perhaps where hair is being too difficult to comprehend (5,4,4) |
| HAPHAZARD | Random man's blown top with difficult to comprehend street map (9) |
| MONKEY | 1942 translation by Arthur Waley of novel Journey to the West, attributed to Wu Cheng'en (6) |
| EDUCATEDGUESSES | Like Cambridge graduate guesthouses, leaving you old punts (8,7) |
| COLE | Flame-haired model and Cambridge graduate, Lily _ (4) |
| MIRIAM | Oxford-born actress and Cambridge graduate, _ Margolyes (6) |