| LANCASTRIAN | Tin can Sara left swinging on the side of an old house |
| HINGE | Complain, start to worry having left swinging joint (5) |
| BORROWERS | Film about a family of tiny people who live in the floors and walls of an old house, The - - - (9) |
| ORANGE | The colour of an old house (6) |
| SALOON | Also swinging on the bar |
| DRAFT | Feature of an old home, perhaps |
| FLANK | The side of an animal, between the ribs and the hip (5) |
| PAPER | Fun fall art: If you put a leaf under a sheet of ___ and rub the side of an unwrapped crayon over it, a picture of a leaf will soon appear |
| RUNNINGBOARD | Managing company directors on the side of an vintage car (7,5) |
| LOIN | Cut of meat from the side of an animal (4) |
| BUMP | A jolt or knock to the head or throat, or even the side of an Oxbridge boat (4) |
| FLAN | It won't quite make the side of an open tart (4) |
| WIDERECEIVER | U.S. football position several yards to the side of an offensive formation (4,8) |
| LATERAL | Relating to the sides of an object or plant (7) |
| SQUEAK | A high-pitched peep of a mouse, creak of a rusty door hinge in an old house or whine of a bubbling frying-pan of colcannon or scouse (6) |
| RHS | Abbreviated term for the right side of an equation or for the name of the gardening charity that runs the Chelsea Flower Show (1,1,1) |
| BRIDGEHEAD | An area of ground secured on the enemy's side of an obstacle (10) |
| DEBIT | Acknowledgment of a sum owing by entry on the left side of an account (5) |
| OMAYYAD | Old distress call half-reflected from an old house |
| SNUG | Cosy, often dishevelled room with an open fire and books in an old house; or, a private area for a few people in a pub (4) |