| ATTENTIONSPAN | Time over which a person can concentrate |
| PANICROOM | A secure space within a house, to which a person can flee if someone breaks in (5,4) |
| AGEOFCONSENT | Age at which a person can enter into a legally binding contract (3,2,7) |
| DELICT | Law: a wrong in which a person can claim damages from another (6) |
| DEEDPOLL | Legal means by which a person can change their name |
| SPOUSE | One per customer, please: As long as monogamy is the law of the land, a person can have only one at a time |
| OVAL | Here, of course, a person can get a duck (4) |
| ENTERTAINABLE | Such a person can indeed be amused by a show (13) |
| BOLTHOLE | A place where a person can escape and hide (8) |
| LITERATE | Such a person can read one in a letter that's been torn up (8) |
| BLOND | What you are if you've proven that a person can go platinum without being able to carry a tune |
| POND | Place where a person can reflect, in two ways |
| STILT | A person can take big strides with this |
| ONESSHIPCOMESIN | A person can be rich when . . . |
| PEARS | Fruit a person can get on with (5) |
| LOUDSPEAKER | Such a person can be heard without one (11) |
| SOMUCH | Only what a person can take? |
| EVENTUALIS | Climate activists used this Greek legal word and concept to describe government's climate protection inertia: Where a person can foresee that their conduct is likely to cause the death of another, but |
| DUNBAR | ___'s number, cognitive limit to how many relationships a person can maintain |
| HUMP | The gibbosity of a dromedary camel; or, a mound over which a railway vehicle is shunted so as to run by gravity in a marshalling yard (4) |