| ULULATES | Set a wonderful example - the reverse will bring yells |
| MARVEL | Wonderful example |
| BEGINNER | Start to believe for example the Queen behind the bar is a novice (8) |
| LEGS | They support the sovereign, for example - the head of state (4) |
| ARABLE | For example, the Syrian and the French can be cultivated (6) |
| CAPITAL | For example, the "A" of "A1" (7) |
| EGAD | For example, the commercial is a mild expletive |
| LIEGES | Doesn't tell the truth about, for example, The Lords (6) |
| INSTANCE | For example, the nice new boy on the inside (8) |
| HABITAT | A spell in, for example, the Derby environment (7) |
| BEATLESRECORD | Help, for example, the chap on the hit list (7,6) |
| DRAWDOWN | In lowball, discard, for example, the king and the 8, taking two cards instead of one, because you t |
| METONYMS | Substituted words referring to an attribute for the thing with which it is closely associated, for example, 'the ring' to mean 'boxing' (8) |
| THREE | You in olden times included arithmetic. For example, the number of feet one may find in the yard (5) |
| CITY | Cork from Shiraz, for example - the one you won't get in a pub (4) |
| CHAMBERMUSIC | Type of pot that goes with reggae, for example, the sort orchestrated by a small ensemble (7,5) |
| SEASON | For example, the fall of US spy state is so nuanced from the start (6) |
| EPITHET | Tag or nickname - for example, the 'Clockwork Orange' given to the Glasgow Subway (7) |
| AMPHIBIAN | A protected class of species that can thrive in areas of railway biodiversity - for example, the great crested newt (9) |
| HORNS | Outgrowths on the heads of some animals, for example the Mallorcan wild goat (5) |