| FOURPM | Hour for a British cuppa, traditionally |
| SLEEP | Subject of the old proverb "Six hours for a man, seven for a woman, and eight for a fool" |
| TEATIME | Appointed hour for a meal or a beverage (7) |
| HURL | It takes nothing less than an hour for a novice to have a fling! (4) |
| AMATEUR | A game lover always has half an hour for a friend (7) |
| 2AM | Bad hour for a car alarm to go off |
| TOUR | Time, three-quarters of an hour, for a trip (4) |
| IDAHOAN | Maybe Diana allowed half hour for a statesman (7) |
| DISPLAY | Slip out during 24 hours for a show (7) |
| CLEANSLATE | Vacuums after hours for a perfect record (5,5) |
| FRIDAY | 24 hours for a man to be helpful (6) |
| EVENTIME | Exactly 3 hours for a marathon, e.g. |
| NINETOFIVE | Hours for a typical day shift |
| TWOORTHREE | 1400 hours or 1500 hours for a few (3,2,5) |
| CHORUS | Final piece of music broke up hours for a group of singers (6) |
| JUICER | A cider press, lemon squeezer, reamer or other fruit-essence extractor; a dipso, tippler, toper or wino; or, with "lime", a dated somewhat-disparaging nickname for a British sailor/person (6) |
| LASKI | A silk tie for a British socialist |
| AGATHA | ___ Raisin, British whodunit sleuth named for a British writer |
| ATKINS | Tommy ____, a generic name for a British Army private |
| POM | A slang term for a British person in Australia (3) |