| HIPPOGRIFF | Mythical beast in the form of a horse crossed with an eagle (10) |
| SEADOG | A Jack tar, old salt, pirate or sailor; a white rainbow as seen by a mariner; an antiquated word for a shark or a seal; or, a heraldic beast in the form of a talbot with a beaver's tail (3,3) |
| MATTOCK | Agricultural tool in the form of a pickaxe crossed with an adze (7) |
| ALPS | Mountain range which Hannibal crossed with an army (4) |
| SAUSAGEDOG | Common name of the dog breed crossed with a corgi to make a dorgi (7,3) |
| ACCESSROAD | A bit of countryside crossed with a twisting minor route |
| USPASSPORT | Book with an eagle on its cover |
| CENTAURS | Fabulous creatures with the form of a horse, having a human body, arms, and head in place of its ned(and head (8) |
| KELPIE | In Scottish folklore, a water spirit in the form of a horse that drowned its riders (6) |
| KELPIES | Water spirits of Scottish folklore, typically taking the form of a horse |
| SCEPTRE | Ceremonial rod tipped with an eagle by the Romans and with a cross by Christians |
| FLAG | Mexico's is green white and red with an eagle in the middle |
| GRYPHON | Mythical creature with an eagle's head and wings and a lion's body |
| GRIFFIN | A mythical creature with an eagle's head and wings and lion's body |
| COGSWORTH | Butler to the Beast in the 1992 Disney animation Beauty and the Beast, transformed into a mantel clock (9) |
| UNICORN | Mythical beast in an Irish Rovers tune |
| GOAT | Billy, nanny or kid, an animal known in French as a chevre and collectively as a trip which is depicted crossed with a fish to symbolise Capricorn (4) |
| MEXICO | Country with an eagle clutching a serpent on its flag (6) |
| JOHN | Evangelist often represented in art with an eagle (4) |
| ERNE | Here's another nest with an eagle in it! (4) |