| SASSENACH | How a Scottish person might describe an English person (9) |
| NAE | How a Scottish person says "No" |
| WEE | Tiny, to a Scottish person |
| UPTHEWALL | How one might describe an indoor climber becoming furious? (2,3,4) |
| PENSIONER | English person in work could finally be one (9) |
| ARCHETYPE | "It's typical month - no money" (English person) (9) |
| OPENSFIRE | Appalling if English person starts a fight |
| VEGETABLE | Word that derives from "animated, enliven, excite", yet is used to describe an inanimate object in the form of a cabbage, carrot, cauliflower, courgette, cucumber or other edible part of a plant (9) |
| ESPERANTO | English person at assembly using common language |
| ESPIONAGE | English person of wisdom outside very good on secret assignments? |
| MICROSOFT | Small and flexible doesn't quite describe an IT company (9) |
| ATONEMENT | Single pitch intended, we hear, to describe an act that will make amends |
| FAIRANDSQUARE | How you might describe an old-fashioned looker, honestly (4,3,6) |
| INSHORT | How one might describe an alcoholic drink's contents briefly (2,5) |
| INDEPTH | How one might describe an ocean diver thoroughly? (2,5) |
| TOSOMEDEGREE | How one might describe an undergraduate's progress in part? (2,4,6) |
| INTHEORY | How one might describe an ideologue's expertise on paper? (2,6) |
| SECONDHAND | Feature of an old clock, or adjective that might describe an old clock |
| BOSSY | How one might describe an attention-demanding pet |
| POM | Informally in Australia, an English person (3) |