| CARFERRY | Goes to Britain perhaps to carry referee back (3,5) |
| SALUKI | Short girl goes to Britain with one dog (6) |
| HUMP | Carry referee out the back of hospital (4) |
| GUMFIELD | Dig flume perhaps to carry mining from here (3-5) |
| SPECIALEFFECTS | They may enhance talking picture with best beer, perhaps, to carry out on Sunday (7,7) |
| BLUEHARE | Herbivorous animal native to Britain and Ireland (4,4) |
| TROLLOPE | Author of the Barsetshire novels who introduced the pillar box to Britain (8) |
| HONGKONG | What did China lease to Britain for 99 years from 1898? (4,4) |
| COMPAGNO | Daihatsu car that came to Britain in the 1960s (8) |
| SQUIRREL | With young known as kittens, a drey-dwelling animal with a red species native to Britain under threat by its American cousin (8) |
| SWALLOWS | Birds flying some 6,000 miles during their annual spring migration from South Africa to Britain before nesting in cowsheds, barns, eaves and stables (8) |
| UMBRELLA | A kind of sunshade introduced to Britain in the 17th century that soon became a rain canopy (8) |
| PORTUGAL | Country in mainland Europe that conforms to UK time (8) |
| TIMBUKTU | This city provides most colour to UK trade union (8) |
| HEATHROW | Third person at hotel using line referring to UK destination |
| ABROAD | For an American woman, being in the UK, perhaps (6) |
| REALM | Bore, largely, keeping pound in the UK, perhaps |
| NATIONWIDE | Idea in town broadcast across the UK, perhaps (10) |
| IMPORT | Bring goods into the UK - perhaps by rail-connected sites such as London gateway (6) |
| NRA | In 1940 this US firearms organisation collected 7,000 weapons to send to Britain to help that nation |