| MESSAGE | Perhaps able seamen got its contents out to read (7,2,1,6) |
| INABOTTLE | Perhaps able seamen got its contents out to read (7,2,1,6) |
| LIQUID | One between two ponies, perhaps, able to run |
| CONTINENT | Europe perhaps able to control movement (9) |
| MONGOOSE | Some goon perhaps able to kill snakes (8) |
| WEASEL | Furtive mustelid whose supposed ability to suck the contents out of an A"uf without breaking its shell gave rise to a term for equivocal or evasive words, used to reduce the force of a concept being e |
| ENSUE | Follow able seamen. Suez Canal catches them out (5) |
| ABASES | It humbles able-seamen being out at sea (6) |
| ABRADES | How it wears when we read Able-Seamen were involved! (7) |
| BYRE | Where the cows are, be about to get your contents out (4) |
| DECONGESTANT | Moved aged contents out - that's a relief (12) |
| EMPTIES | Pours the contents out of a container (7) |
| OBSOLETE | Flipping bad smell? Fish stew's contents out of date (8) |
| PLACATE | Calm astronaut content out in space (7) |
| PURR | Sounds like the cat's got its tongue, perhaps (4) |
| MOUSE | Computer device that got its name from its taillike wire |
| MACKINTOSH | What weatherproof coat got its name from the Scottish inventor of its fabric? (10) |
| MAGGOT | Magnum got its heart eaten out by a fly youngster (6) |
| ASHES | The cineraria plant got its name because the down on its leaves looks like what? (5) |
| INLANDREVENUE | Government department which got its current name in 1952 (6,7) |