| USHANT | Island 5 miles long and 2 miles wide. off the west coast of Brittany (6) |
| CAMPTOWN | In an old song, which racetrack is five miles long? (8) |
| DACTYLIC | In prosody, consisting of one long and two short syllables |
| MALAWI | Home of Africa's Calendar Lake (365 miles long, 52 miles wide) |
| CHILE | Country 2,700 miles long and, on average, 110 miles wide |
| ISLE | Fair-; three miles long and inhabited by around 60 people, a land between Orkney and Shetland noted for traditional knitwear (4) |
| IDA | State that's only 45 miles wide at the top: Abbr. |
| EPPING | 12 miles by 2 miles forest of north-east London (6) |
| JARROW | Industrial town in Tyne and Wear, about 5 miles east of Newcastle (6) |
| BRETON | European Celtic language of the people of Brittany, its closest relatives are Cornish and Welsh (6) |
| NANTES | French city on the River Loire that was once ancestral home of the Dukes of Brittany (6) |
| OAKHAM | Market town five miles west of Rutland Water (6) |
| NELSON | Lancashire town five miles north of Burnley (6) |
| RADNOR | New or Old villages five miles from Presteigne, which share their names with their historical county (6) |
| RENNES | Prefecture of the region of Brittany (6) |
| AMOCOCADIZ | Liberian oil tanker forced on to rocks off the coast of Brittany in 1978 (5,5) |
| STMALO | Fishing port and tourist centre of Brittany (2,4) |
| ARTHUR | Prince of Brittany supposed to have been put to death by King John's orders after being made prisoner by him in 1202 (6) |
| CARNAC | Commune of Brittany noted for lines of standing stones |
| ROSCOFF | Village on the northern coast of Brittany that receives crosschannel ferries from Plymouth (7) |