| INTURN | Pub accepting performer mostly on a revolving basis (2,4) |
| BARISTAS | Suppliers of drinks in pubs accepting one's thanks (8) |
| INCAS | Popular performers, mostly South American Indians (5) |
| SWIVEL | Turn on a pivot, like a revolving chair? (6) |
| CAM | Projection on a revolving shaft (3) |
| TURN | Act on a revolving stage (4) |
| ECCENTRIC | Device on a revolving shaft |
| TURNS | Acts on a revolving stage? |
| ROLLON | Dispensed by means of a revolving ball (4-2) |
| REGULARLY | King in the ancient past retaining fool, mostly on a routine basis |
| PLAZA | Quietly lounge around mostly on a public square (5) |
| ABUDHABI | Dependency mostly on a friend in the City |
| NOMINAL | Lack of fur, mostly, on a large puppet? |
| SPINNER | A person who twists fibres into yarns; a Shakespearean word for a spider; a revolving device used as an alternative to a die in board games; or, a Jamaican dumpling (7) |
| DRUM | A revolving cylinder in a washer; a barrel for oil; a house; a tympanum for signalling; or, by extension, in Australia, a piece of information (4) |
| SPIN | A balletic pirouette; a play of a vinyl record; an uncontrolled spiral descent of an aircraft; or, a revolving motion imparted to a cricket ball (4) |
| SWEEPER | A flueologist; a libero; a mine detector; or, a device with a revolving brush for cleaning carpets (7) |
| PINWHEEL | A revolving firework; a whirl-like sandwich or puff-pastry savoury; a paper windmill or whirligig; Haworth's aeonium; or, an escapement for lifting the hammer of a striking clock (8) |
| LAZY | A "___ Susan" is a revolving tray sometimes found in the centre of a table in a restaurant. (4) |
| SUSAN | When lazy, she's a revolving tray on a dining table (5) |