| BANDOLERO | Hispanic outlaw - or old bean (anag) (9) |
| BONAPPETIT | Tip-top bean (anag) - waiter's words (3,7) |
| BANES | Curses; beans (anag.) (5) |
| MANGETOUT | Vegetable, old bean, begone! (9) |
| FLAGEOLET | Jack perhaps set about burying old bean (9) |
| COGITATES | Works the old bean |
| CHECKMATE | "How are you paying for this, old bean?" |
| CHAP | A pig's cheek; or, from "buyer, customer, pedlar", a word for a boy, fellow or ordinary man; or, endearingly, a mucker, old bean, old fruit etc (4) |
| BAND | A stripe such as the heraldic bar-sinister; a lace or linen cavalier collar; a range of frequencies or wavelengths in a spectrum; a rock group; or, a gang of gorillas, men, outlaws or thieves (4) |
| RAPPAREE | Old outlaw or highwayman (8) |
| DEN | Related to "valley, threshing floor", the low sunken cave, hollow, lair or pit of a fox, lion, outlaw or wild boar (3) |
| BADMAN | Outlaw or villain |
| HOOD | Outlaw or gangster? It depends on the initial case (4) |
| BANDIT | Outlaw or prohibit key object (6) |
| ROBROY | Highland outlaw, or Walter Scott novel (3, 3) |
| KRONOS | Uses the old bean |
| SOYA | Ring in what's said in the present, Old Bean (4) |
| STRINGY | Old bean is so mean - that's about right (7) |
| LENTIL | Dried up old bean fast approaching forty nine! (6) |
| TATA | "Bye, old bean!" |