| QUAIDORSAY | One settling in courtyard -- or, for instance, a Paris street (4,1'5) |
| OREGANO | A particular herb, or, for instance, a number |
| MIGRANT | One settling in new country |
| QUAD | A university courtyard or a large muscle of the leg |
| RIAD | Traditional Moroccan house built around a central courtyard or garden (4) |
| COHORS | Courtyard or more commonly, regiment of a legion |
| PLANTATION | Left worker in courtyard beside fitness centre in country estate (10) |
| QUADRANGLE | Group of team members quarrel, losing heads in courtyard |
| ANTIQUATED | Old-fashioned social worker and I, extremely talkative in courtyard (10) |
| ROGUE | One breaks the law to go turning up in a Paris street (5) |
| BASRA | Support for woman outside, for instance, a place in Iraq (5) |
| STONE | Is Sharon, for instance, a saintly one? (5) |
| CLOSE | A word meaning "to shut", hence a shut-in courtyard, cul-de-sac, lane, small field or other confined space; or, a cathedral's surrounding precinct (5) |
| QUADS | Short word for rectangular or square courtyards or green spaces enclosed by college buildings (5) |
| APACHE | Native American may be found misbehaving in a Paris street. (6) |
| OPENINGNIGHT | First time Julius Caesar appeared on world's stage, for instance - a window of opportunity and a dark period? (7,5) |
| ORGANISER | Came up with arrangements for Bach, for instance, a stingy type needing no introduction (9) |
| ATLANTICCITY | Off Galway and Limerick, for instance, a tourist destination for the American risk takers (8,4) |
| LEDGE | Was first to put up, for instance, a shelf (5) |
| SPRAY | Pair enthralled by, for instance, a cloud of drops (5) |