| OHERN | He marks his ball with picture of kangaroo or hen depiction (5) |
| WORKBENCH | Where some will labour, buxom girl seizes king in his ball (9) |
| LIEDETECTOR | Will it tell a golfer where his ball has got to? (3,8) |
| REGISTER | Greet sir as he marks it? (8) |
| AHOP | "It's just ___, skip, and a jump away" (golfer's description of his ball's location after a mulligan |
| NOTCHER | He marks things but not the singer |
| FRANKINGMACHINE | He, Mark, financing contraption, it shows after use that postage has been paid (8-7) |
| TEE | Something a sportsman might use to hold his balls |
| CARDS | V&A co-founder Sir Henry Cole's delightful invention of paper tidings or festive notes, often illustrated with pictures of the Nativity, robin redbreasts or of winter revellers skating in their warm f |
| VOTER | He apparently marks his choice wrong (5) |
| TWAIN | Acclaimed American author. Mark, his pseudonym I want undone! (5) |
| COURT | Word with "juvenile" "kangaroo" or "Supreme" (5) |
| TROOP | A collective noun for a group of baboons, kangaroos or scouts (5) |
| ROOST | A number of kangaroos trashed a henhouse (5) |
| FRAME | Word with picture or freeze |
| COMIC | Magazine with picture stories (5) |
| HOODS | Parts of kangaroo jackets |
| MOBS | From the Latin meaning "fickle crowds", disorderly throngs, gangs or ribble-rabbles; a word for flocks of emus or groups of kangaroos; or, neglige dresses (4) |
| JOEYS | Baby kangaroos or koalas |
| MOB | Group of kangaroos or emus (3) |