| CHOCTAW | During World War I, this Native American language was primarily used in the transmission of secret tactical messages and was instrumental in a successful surprise attack against the Germans. |
| RAGS | During World War I, this French stray dog was adopted by an American serviceman to be part of his unit. He played an important role as a message carrier, running notes between the rear headquarters an |
| CHEROKEE | The vast majority of this native North American people were forced to move to a reservation west of the Mississippi in 1838 (8) |
| CHEYENNE | The capital of Wyoming takes its name from this Native American people. (8) |
| OPACITY | The degree of blocking the transmission of light (7) |
| RADIO | General name for sound communication by radio waves, usually through the transmission of music, news, and other types of programs from single broadcast stations to multitudes of individual listeners e |
| SALISH | Native American language of the Northwest |
| NAVAJO | Native American language used as a code in WWII (6) |
| CREE | Reduced statement of beliefs in native American language (4) |
| TAHITAN | I admitted this Native American could be from Papeete |
| TELEGRAPH | Any device or system that allows the transmission of information by coded signal over distance, or the device for transmitting printed information by wire or radio wave. (9) |
| AMICIS | Am I this side of my friends in the dative? |
| NEUTRAL | Position of the controls of a gearbox that leaves the transmission disengaged (7) |
| PANKRATION | This sport was primarily a combination of boxing and wrestling and may show similarities to modern mixed martial arts competitions |
| APPROACH | Speak to expert in clipped native American language |
| CRETE | Island totem's origin shrouded in Native American language (5) |
| CREOLE | Look up in native American language |
| FAROESE | The first novel in what language was Regin i Lio's Babelstornio (1909) |
| YIDDISH | What language was much used by Jews in Europe before the Holocaust? (7) |
| JOHNSON | Samuel, English writer whose A Dictionary Of The English Language was published in 1755 (7) |