| JOEPUBLIC | Name for the man on the street or the Clapham omnibus (3,6) |
| SANDSTORM | Could be five hundred on the street or a thousand, stirring things up in very dry place |
| OAR | What the Cockney may row with on the street or in a boat (3) |
| BEG | To humbly entreat, whether a mendicant monk, a pauper with a cap on the street or a hopeful spaniel sitting up for a treat (3) |
| JOEBLOGGS | Pokes about electronic website with man on the street (3,6) |
| ROMANROAD | Watling Street or the Fosse Way, eg (5,4) |
| VOXPOPULI | "Man on the street" segment |
| HEMINGWAY | The man on the road around China is an author |
| STEVEDORE | Dee's overt look at the man on the wharf is a bit obvious (9) |
| SUPPORTER | Drink with the man on the railway platform and he'll back your team (9) |
| ANNOUNCER | No, Anne! Get that cur in! Listen to the man on the radio (9) |
| KEEPSTIME | What the man on the beat does (5,4) |
| BEGGAR | Chocolate-coated Easter item for the man on the street? (6) |
| HOIPOLLOI | Those on the Corinthian omnibus? (3,6) |
| FORWARD | Send on his mail for the man on the field (7) |
| TJUNCTION | Short time at Clapham, for one a turning point (1-8) |
| BISHOP | A mulled wine for the man on the board (6) |
| RIDER | There's a clause added for the man on the bike (5) |
| COMMONMAN | The ordinary inhabitant of Clapham? (6,3) |
| PALMBEACH | Live in Clapham, perhaps - a major resort and tourist centre (4,5) |