| SPLIFF | Joint Scots and Irish flowers, identically trimmed (6) |
| LIFFEY | Irish flower magazine rings French capital at end of February (6) |
| BALEEN | Prohibition includes Irish flower belonging to really large swimmer (6) |
| DOMINO | Small, flat, rectangular block used as a gaming object. Like playing cards, these objects bear identifying marks on one side and are blank or identically patterned on the other side. (6) |
| STUART | Henry -, Lord Darnley; second husband of Mary, Queen of Scots and the father of James I and VI of Scotland (6) |
| ASLEEP | Legless type gathers Irish flower where one expects to find them in the bed (6) |
| CLONED | Reproduced identically (6) |
| JAMESI | Son of Mary, Queen of Scots and king of England and Ireland from 1603 until his death in 1625 (5,1) |
| ROBERT | Edinburgh author's novel Orbiter Lost on Venus contains Scots and English lead characters (6,5,9) |
| FRASER | Antonia ---, biographer of Mary, Queen of Scots and Marie Antoinette |
| ASIANS | Continentals like Scot and son (6) |
| VISCID | Sticky Vicky, Scot and Ida put their heads together (6) |
| ECHOED | Responded identically to |
| GAELS | Scots and Irish returning, essential to isle again (5) |
| ENGLISHLANGUAGE | They share a border with the Scots and Irish, for instance? You hear this all the time at Westminster! (7,8) |
| CELTS | Scots and Irish |
| HIBERNIAN | Winter ate away Scot and Irish (9) |
| VERBATIM | Ends of 10 and 20 could be rendered identically |
| ALLITERATE | Everyone to repeat and use words that begin identically (10) |
| HETERONYM | Word spelled identically to another but with a different pronunciation and meaning |