| LEET | In English and Welsh history, a yearly or half-yearly manorial court of record (4) |
| JEDI | In the 2001 census, 0.7% of English and Welsh people indicated they were of this fictional religion |
| ORAL | ____ history, a body of stories about past events passed on by word of mouth (4) |
| NISI | ___ prius (court of record) |
| PAYE | Dad's half yearly bill from the tax man? (4) |
| GIFT | It means "present" in English and "poison" in German |
| EDIT | In English and French says "Revise it" (4) |
| YEAH | Half yearly top heavy informal affirmation |
| NATO | Intl. group whose initials in English and French are reversed |
| CARR | Vikki with albums in English and Spanish |
| ASSART | In British legal history, a piece of forest land cleared or reclaimed for arable use; or, the act or offence of grubbing up of trees and bushes (6) |
| SERF | Manorial menial |
| STEWARD | Race marshal; or, the manager of a medieval manorial court (7) |
| LEETS | Historically, courts of record held by some manorial lords; or, Scots for rolls of candidates suitable for posts (5) |
| AGINCOURT | Battle immortalised in Henry V where English and Welsh longbowmen decisively defeated a larger French army in 1415 (9) |
| DANDIPRAT | A bit of history, a northern one of the original 13 being caught in blast! (9) |
| NGUYEN | Author who wrote the 2024 memoir "A Man of Two Faces: A Memoir, a History, a Memorial" |
| DEE | Flower of French and English (and Welsh and Scots!) |
| ANNUALS | Almanacs, gift-books, keepsakes, Rupert Bear hardbacks or other periodicals published once yearly; or, cornflowers, dahlias and zinnias, for example, that complete their life cycles in one growing sea |
| ADVANCEDLEVEL | Examination of the English and Welsh General Certificate of Education (8,5) |