| COINED | Introduced into the lexicon |
| FALLOW | Species of deer introduced into the UK by the Normans in the 11th century (6) |
| STEPNEY | East End barrow boy womble introduced into The Wombles during the 1990s revival of the TV series (7) |
| VENOM | Poison secreted by some snakes, spiders, insects and introduced into the body of the victim by bite or sting |
| TATTOO | Tahitian word, adapted and introduced into the English vocabulary by Captain Cook, for an indelible inked design on the skin; or, in another sense, a military drumbeat or bugle call (6) |
| FANDANGO | Dance introduced into the Gulf and Angola (8) |
| GROG | Drink Vice Admiral Edward Vernon introduced into the Royal Navy in 1740 (4) |
| APACHE | Type of attack helicopter that was introduced into the U.S. military in 1986 (6) |
| KINGEDWARD | A mainly white-skinned potato introduced into the British market in 1902 (4,6) |
| ANTITOXIN | A blood protein formed in response to a poisonous substance introduced into the body (9) |
| MUNTJAC | Small deer introduced into the UK over a century ago |
| VACCINE | Modified pathogen introduced into the body to prevent disease |
| TRAMPOLINE | Apparatus used in a form of gymnastics introduced into the Olympics in 2000 (10) |
| PUTINAWORD | Very briefly, help with the compilation of the lexicon |
| ABC | Band whose debut studio album was The Lexicon of Love (3) |
| PUTIN | & 16 Recommend: Add one term to the lexicon, perhaps (3,2,1,4) |
| DICTIONARIES | Car edition is among the lexicons (12) |
| RACCOONDOG | This canine, native to eastern Asia and introduced into Europe. Some authorities place it in the raccoon family, Procyonidae, possibly because it resembles the raccoon in having dark facial markings t |
| THONG | Skimpy garment from the centre of Manchuria introduced into Chinese society (5) |
| JONASSALK | US virologist who developed the first vaccine against polio, introduced into use in 1955 (5,4) |