| ELUDES | Escapes the Spanish, due to turning south (6) |
| ELUDE | Escape the Spanish, due for trouble (5) |
| ALWAYS | A two-master turning south invariably (6) |
| SATORI | Enlightenment leads to turning out in Eastern dress (6) |
| SHADES | More than one ghost finally escapes the underworld |
| LETUPS | Pauses essential to turning dispute litigious (3-3) |
| SWITCHON | Term meaning to cause a device to operate, as opposed to turning it off; to assume insincere charm, false emotion, tears etc at will; or, to make one up-to-date, in dress or outlook (6,2) |
| AENEAS | Trojan prince who sailed to Italy to escape the sack of Troy (6) |
| UTMOST | Shortly, the doctors will escape the dust storm. That's extreme. (6) |
| EVADED | We managed to escape the clutches of Dave and Ed (6) |
| GOTOUT | Escape the need to keep running to and fro? (3,3) |
| SPINNER | I make deliveries turning South to Middlesex town |
| BEZOS | 2 to live north of Australia, turning south (5) |
| DAPHNE | Water nymph of Greek myth turned into a laurel tree to escape the amorous pursuit of Apollo (6) |
| INARUT | Unable to escape the daily grind |
| GETOFF | To escape the consequences of an action (3,3) |
| LETOFF | Allow to escape the cross Channel swell (3,3) |
| ONUSES | No! We escape the impositions (6) |
| WINTERS | Escapes the cold in Florida, e.g. |
| KEIR | VAT all right? Nothing escapes the UK taxmen as before |