| LONGER | Like a nautical mile, to a mile |
| DELABOLE | I have a large abode but it is falling apart, so I'm moving, just half a mile, to a place near Camelford (8) |
| MILAN | Three-quarters of mile to a new city (5) |
| EIGHTH | Furlong, to a mile |
| FURLOUGH | They're marked on track up to a mile... without having one over the eight! (8) |
| NONET | Group similar to a Miles Davis-led band formed in the late 1940s, e.g. |
| CABLE | Collection of wires twisted or bonded as a rope; the chain of a ship's anchor; or, a unit of length equal to one tenth of a nautical mile (5) |
| CNOTE | The chain of an anchor; a heavy rope used for mooring a ship; or, one tenth of a nautical mile (5) |
| BONMOT | Quip that punt covered a nautical mile (3,3) |
| KNOT | A nautical mile per hour (4) |
| TROUTFARM | Some trawl a long way from land - a mile - to find a supply of fish (5,4) |
| AMIGO | A half mile to travel with a friend (5) |
| COMPILE | A cop will go a mile to compose it! |
| STALLOW | Bird used as a traditional tattoo symbol by a sailor to show off the number of nautical miles they've sailed (7) |
| ILLUMINATE | Light about to disappear within nautical mile at sea (10) |
| KNOTS | Units of speed equal to one nautical mile per hour (5) |
| MILDALE | For a drink, it's less than a mile to the valley (4,3) |
| AMISH | The people living in this village have to walk more than a mile to fresh water |
| MITCHAM | Whence there's half a mile to go to the match, maybe (7) |
| ELIMINATE | Over a mile to get home, having dined with dispatch (9) |