| DYNES | The 100,000 in a newton |
| BTUS | There are 100,000 in a therm |
| FIG | Fruit in a 'Newton' cookie |
| BOLIVIAN | Like El Alto, the highest large city (population > 100,000) in the world |
| LAKH | 100,000 in our country, especially rupees (4) |
| LAKHS | Multiples of 100,000 in our country, especially rupees (5) |
| CALICO | Fabric firm supports turnover of 100,000 in India (6) |
| SWING | The compass or sweep of a golf club, pendulum, trapeze or of one of the balls of a Newton's cradle (5) |
| COLOUR | Any one of the spectral hues determined by ocular interpretation of electromagnetic waves whose principles can be demonstrated by means of a Newton disc (6) |
| ERG | Fraction of a newton-meter |
| DYNE | Wee bit of a newton |
| MOMENTUM | A Newton's Cradle demonstrates its conservation |
| DESK | Surface for many a Newton's cradle |
| NOTNEW | A Newton problem is hardly original - it's old hat (3,3) |
| LAC | 100,000 in rupees? Not enough from what we hear |
| NYIRAGONGO | Active volcano in the Virunga Mountains of east-central Africa. In 2002 the city of Goma was largely destroyed by its lava, leaving more than 100,000 people homeless and creating a refugee crisis. (10 |
| CHIANG | In 1934 around 100,000 Chinese communists under the leadership of Mao Tse-tung retreated 10,000 km from the Nationalist Army of ... Kai-Shek in what was to become known as the Long March |
| TONGA | Archipelago in the southern Pacific (pop 100,000). It joined the Commonwealth in 1970 (5) |
| GOLDDISC | Named after a precious metal, a framed replica record that is issued to a recording artist in recognition of 100,000 sales of an album (4,4) |
| GOLDRUSH | Mass migration such as that by an estimated 100,000 prospectors to the Klondike region of the Yukon in NW Canada between 1896 and 1899 |