| SIGNS | Roadside information notices described in the Highway Code whose pictographs include bikes, bridges, running deer, horse-riders, sliding cars, windsocks and trams (5) |
| BINARY | Code whose digits can be translated into letters, eight digits at a time |
| SIGN | Information notice (4) |
| INFECTION | With a little information, notice new contamination (9) |
| RULES | Regulations, such as those in the Highway Code or Laws of Cricket (5) |
| BUILTUP | Description of an area densely covered by buildings; or, according to the Highway Code, an area where the speed limit of a road is 30 mph (5-2) |
| LESLIEHOREBELISHA | Minister of Transport from 1934 to 1937 who rewrote the Highway Code and introduced the driving test and a beacon at pedestrian crossings |
| TRAFFICCOPS | They take pics for fact of people breaking the highway code (7,4) |
| FLIPTHROUGH | Skim to the end, but flop in a rut in the highway (4,7) |
| HANDSIGNALS | Those described by around a third of the original Highway Code in 1931 |
| RULESOFTHEROAD | The highway code (5,2,3,4) |
| DRIVINGTEST | Exam that includes the Highway Code (7,4) |
| TENNANT | Actor whose voice features in The Highway Rat on bbc1, David ....... (7) |
| RACED | Completed in speed with one in the highway (5) |
| STREAMLET | A millilitre in the highway? That doesn't even amount to this! |
| SYMBOL | Any one of the pictographs explained on a map's legend (6) |
| TORISPELLING | Author of a bestselling 2008 autobiography, and a hint to some pictographs in this puzzle |
| RODE | Trotted in the highway, reportedly (4) |
| ROADS | Dora's lost in the highways and byways (5) |
| REBUS | Puzzle that uses pictographs; or, Ian Rankin's detective character (5) |