| ADVENTAVERAT | She had been regularly approaching (frequentative form) |
| PRESSO | Frequentative form of premo (or its dat. / abl. masc. / neut. perf. pass. part. sing.) |
| LIBELLEE | Pretty girl in fancy lei, she had been maligned (8) |
| CASHEDIN | Realised she had been trapped by the murderer |
| CASHED | Realised she had been trapped by the bounder (6) |
| PUSHED | Having turned up, she had been given the shove (6) |
| LASHED | The boy held she had been whipped (6) |
| BOMBE | Sweet bloom's been regularly pruned |
| AMOEBA | Animal in a cell - a second has been regularly raised |
| SPLASHED | With a bunch of pals, she had been playing in the water (8) |
| BETH | _ Sutherland, she had been meeting with her ex behind husband Kirk's back in Coronation Street (4) |
| MOTHER | Dam in need of test -- oh dear, it's been regularly neglected (6) |
| POINTTOPOINT | A steeplechase usually restricted to amateurs riding horses that have been regularly used in hunting |
| ITAVISTIS | You lot kept on going — perf. ito, frequentative of eo |
| TOOTLE | A frequentative onomatopoeia mimicking a soft repetitive sound of a car horn or a flute, hence a word for a casual drive, leisurely journey, meandering stroll or pleasure trip, perhaps for a jolly goo |
| SETAE | Bristly bits must be regularly extracted from sweet face (5) |
| TARDY | Slow these days to be regularly involved in touchdown |
| SADDO | Who stands to be regularly ignored at party? |
| RAITA | Dish offering cream - is that to be regularly given a miss? |
| HAWSER | Head was heard to be regularly missing ship's rope |