| ASSTATED | Per a previous stipulation |
| REMASTER | To make a new, improved version of a previous recording of a musical work (8) |
| REPECHAGE | In sport, a round in which losers of a previous round compete for a place in the next round |
| ROLLBACK | a return to a previous state |
| HOLDOVER | Surviving from a previous time, a ... from an earlier era |
| AWHALEOFATIME | Enjoyable experience of a big swimmer from a previous era? |
| SET | Young onion or shallot bulb grown from seed in a previous season to be planted in spring for a late summer or autumn harvest (3) |
| THEDRINKER | This Banksy statue, a humorous riff on Rodin, was pulled from auction in 2019 after a previous owner claimed it had been stolen from him |
| SMUDGE | A dirty stain, often caused by trying to remove a previous mark (6) |
| ASYOUWERE | Military command which instructs a soldier to return to a previous posture (2,3,4) |
| ANCESTOR | From a previous generation, a much older member of the family in finance store (8) |
| EARLIER | More like a nobleman, apparently, of a previous time (7) |
| PASTICHE | A piece of art that imitates a previous work or style (8) |
| GREATPARIS | In 1811 Napoleon and his officers started using used this code, which was a great improvement on a previous code, which had been deciphered by Major George Scovell. |
| BOOSTER | A dose of an immunising substance given to maintain or renew the effect of a previous one (7) |
| STEPBAIRN | (Scots) A child of one's partner from a previous marriage (9) |
| ANAPHORA | Use of a word, such as it or do, to avoid repeating a previous word (8) |
| PRIOR | There's a name for an ecclesiastic in a previous sense (5) |
| REVERT | Go back to a previous condition |
| RETROJECT | To go back to a previous state (9) |