| ENEMY | Either spy to the other in "Spy |
| ERROL | Mr Flynn, in error, changed from one side to the other in the end (5) |
| LACROSSE | Going from one side to the other in the French game |
| THROUGH | Passed from one side to the other in the rough (7) |
| DIAMETER | From one side to the other in a ring (8) |
| AVIAN | From one end to the other in article about birds (5) |
| JETE | Spring or step from one foot to the other in ballet |
| AMOUSEANDANELEPHANT | One in "the house" who may frighten the other in "the room" |
| CLEOPATRASNEEDLE | Either of two Egyptian obelisks, one on the Thames Embankment in London, and the other in Central Park, New York |
| PIZZADOUGH | It's tossed with the palm of one hand up, and the other in a fist; it's caught on the backs of the fists |
| AXE | The name of two rivers, one rising in Somerset and the other in Dorset (3) |
| ANTIOCH | Two Biblical cities, one in Pisidia the other in Syria, of the same name (7) |
| NOOK | No yen for the other in the corner! |
| EAVES | Spy to drop out from the edge of the roof (5) |
| TRIPLECROWN | In rugby union, a victory by Scotland, England, Wales or Ireland in all three games against the others in the annual Six Nations Championship (6,5) |
| STLOUIS | Where Judy Garland and the others in the Smith family were to meet in this 1944 film? (2,5) |
| VICIOUS | ___ circle, situation where two parties continue to aggravate the other in an unending loop (7) |
| LATHES | He put the last with the others in the workshop (6) |
| TANDEM | One behind the other in Accident & Emergency (6) |
| SQUIRREL | Country gent gloves one hand beside the other in store (8) |