| RESURGENT | Soldiers a doctor nonetheless'brought back' (revived) (9) |
| REDUX | Brought back/ revived |
| ANGIOGRAM | A northern soldier a woman backed in medical investigation (9) |
| ENEMYFIRE | No friendly blaze to give soldiers a warm welcome (5,4) |
| CENTURION | Old soldier's a great cricket scorer? (9) |
| MENATARMS | Former soldiers a blend of smart and mean (3,2,4) |
| PARAMOUNT | Of supreme use to airborne soldier, a horse! (9) |
| GUARDSMAN | Soldier a degree east of Ulster peninsula caught by rifle, say? (9) |
| PHALANX | A formation of ancient Greek warriors with interlocking shields; or, by extension, a dense body of soldiers; a crowd; a bone of a finger or toe; or, a bundle of stamens (7) |
| COHORT | Word, from "garden, farmyard", for a legion's tenth, a company of soldiers, a band of warriors or other unit or group of people, strictly gathered in a hortus-like enclosed space (6) |
| PYRENEAN | A penny dreadful about soldiers a one from a range (8) |
| FILE | A box or folder for papers; a line of soldiers; a collection of computer data; or, an emery board or rasp (4) |
| STANDARD | A battle flag raised as a rallying point for soldiers; a royal banner; an established model; or, the prescribed weight/purity of metals in coinage (8) |
| ROUTEMARCH | A training exercise for soldiers a month after utter defeat by English |
| REGIMENT | German tank turned around soldiers, a lot of soldiers (8) |
| TIN | Metal "Sn" once mined in parts of Cornwall and Devon and used to make some types of toy soldiers; a rectangular loaf of typically white bread; or, a biscuit caddy (3) |
| MEDAL | An inscriptive, commemorative piece of metal awarded as a distinction to a soldier, a scholar, an athlete for proficiency |
| ORPIN | Bloomer, giving soldiers a way of accessing funds |
| CHOWMEIN | Food I fed soldiers a Chinese-American dish (4,4) |
| NORMAN | Among the non-soldiers, a Frenchman (6) |