| TRACK | Racecourse or railway line (5) |
| EPSOM | Racecourse, or salts? (5) |
| RAILS | Tracks for curtains; barriers on a racecourse; or, birds of a family including coots and crakes (5) |
| VIADUCT | Bridge carrying a road or railway line (7) |
| JUNCTION | Where roads or railway lines cross or join (8) |
| TRAIN | Line of gunpowder or railway carriages; or, a caravan of camels (5) |
| LINES | Former name of the units of magnetic flux known as maxwells; ancestral or chronological sequences of people; rows of printed or written words; or, railway tracks (5) |
| ROUTE | The line of a road or railway (5) |
| FLYOVER | Bridge carrying one road or railway line above another (7) |
| UNDERPASSES | Pedestrian tunnels running beneath a road or railway line (11) |
| SABOTEUR | One who deliberately destroys machines or railway lines (8) |
| METER | Kind of maid or railway queen! (5) |
| ARTERY | An important route in a system of roads, rivers or railway lines (6) |
| SPURS | Tubular corollas that give delphiniums their common name; or, railway's branch lines (5) |
| NAVVY | Canal or railway labourer |
| CAREER | From the Latin for "wheeled vehicle", word first for a racecourse or a gallop at full-speed, later a swift headlong rush; or, one's profession or progress through life (6) |
| GRANDSTAND | Tiered seating area commanding the best view of a stadium, circus or racecourse; or, a sports programme whose hosts included Frank Bough and Desmond Lynam (10) |
| LAPS | Circuits of a racecourse or track (4) |
| PADDOCK | Field for ponies to graze; parade ring next to a racecourse; or, an enclosure behind the pits in F1 (7) |
| CORRIDOR | From "running place", an aisle connecting rooms or compartments in a building or railway carriage; or, a strip of land or airspace, affording travel between two places (8) |