| UNETHICAL | Hit uncle - a manoeuvre that's immoral (9) |
| HALSEY | #1 Paul McCartney hit "Uncle Albert/Admiral ___" |
| AMBULANCE | A doctor ordered uncle a means of transport (9) |
| NAUSEATED | Sickened, formed a dent with a manoeuvre (9) |
| PETULANCE | Favourite uncle, a position of peevishness (9) |
| HERCULEAN | Female uncle, a supply of great strength (9) |
| LIBERTINE | Tiber diverted through channel? That's immoral |
| OPERATION | Guy cycling forced into a manoeuvre (9) |
| MISGUGGLE | Is good in one such as Harry Potter's uncle a mistake? |
| NEFARIOUS | Wicked foes ruin a manoeuvre |
| BUNT | Baggy centre of a sail or net; a push with horns; a gentle tap of a pitched baseball; or, a manoeuvre in which a pilot draws a half circle in the sky (4) |
| LOOP | A coil in string or yarn; a picot; a jubilee clip; or, a manoeuvre in which a plane describes a circle in the air (4) |
| UNCLEAR | Uncle, a third of a dollar is a bit obscure! (7) |
| WANTONLY | Just following desire? In a way that's immoral |
| PLOY | A cunning plan to gain advantage; a manoeuvre or gambit in a game or conversation; or, a hobby, job etc with which one is occupied (4) |
| DECADENT | Fair about the advertisement that's immoral (8) |
| HEIMLICH | Henry J ___, American surgeon after whom a manoeuvre for dislodging a foreign body in a person's win |
| UTURN | A manoeuvre made by a vehicle resulting in a reversal of direction (1-4) |
| FLICKON | In sport, a manoeuvre in which a player receives an incoming pass and moves it on quickly with a gentle header or kick to another player (5-2) |
| ASKARI | Soldier takes a risk with a manoeuvre (6) |