| LOKE | Norfolk or Suffolk dialect for a blind alley, cul-de-sac, grass-covered track, narrow lane or private road (4) |
| PLOUGH | Asterism in Ursa Major; a yoga asana; or, an agricultural tool traditionally drawn by a pair or Suffolk Punch draught horses (6) |
| SKIJUMP | Stint carrying Jack half-cut up snow-covered track (3,4) |
| SIBYL | "Privat Lives" character |
| HANSA | _ 3500 Privat, 1930's Borgward group model (5) |
| EARLDOM | Norfolk or Wessex, for example (7) |
| SECRETARY | Covered tracks to protect a senior civil servant |
| REED | Phragmites australis is better known as Norfolk (or common) ... (4) |
| RUELLE | French word for a narrow lane or alley that also refers to a gap between a bed and the side of a bedchamber; or, this room, formerly as the place of reception of elegant French ladies (6) |
| ALLEY | A narrow lane or passage, especially between or behind buildings (5) |
| TUNNEL | A narrow lane, or passage-way (6) |
| GULLY | Small ravine or valley cut by running rainwater; or, a channel or gutter at either side of a tenpin bowling lane or skittles alley (5) |
| TRACTION | Word for draught, drawing or pulling and one from which a farm vehicle derives its name; the grip of a tyre on a lane; or, the propulsion of vehicles (8) |
| ALLEE | French for a tree-lined garden path, root of an English word for a bowler's lane or backstreet for stray cats (5) |
| LABRADOR | A retriever often used as a guide dog for a blind person (8) |
| CULDESAC | A dead-end to a road, a blind-alley (3,2,3) |
| IMPASSE | Form of escapism where a clear head is lost in a blind alley (7) |
| HEDGEROW | A line of bushes, trees and plants, usually growing along a bank bordering a country lane or between fields (8) |
| LIGHTS | Chaplin's masterpiece tells the story of his love for a blind flower girl and his hot-and-cold friendship with a drunken millionaire, City ... |
| ROAD | Thoroughfare such as a motorway, green lane or an ancient holloway or ridgeway (4) |