| STEAM | Vaporous matter depicted in a notable painting by Turner to convey the impression of a train in motion (5) |
| SCREAMER | A bawler, shrieker or wailer, such as the central figure depicted in a notable painting by Edvard Munch (8) |
| DININGCAR | Part of a train in which food is served (6,3) |
| AGRA | City in Uttar Pradesh, site of the Moti Masjid "Pearl Mosque" and the Taj Mahal "Crown of the Palaces" (4) |
| NICOLASCARNOT | Who is regarded as the founder of thermodynamics, publishing his theories in Reflections on the Moti |
| POPE | Poet, Kit-Cat, Scriblerian, master of the heroic couplet and celebrator of the goddess Dulness in The Dunciad, whose villa in Twickenham, as seen in a painting by Turner, was demolished, leaving only |
| MARRIED | In 2.4, the Nurse encounters Romeo in the street. Romeo tells the Nurse to convey the following message to Juliet: "Bid her devise Some means to come to shrift this afternoon, And there she shall at F |
| HANNIBAL | Carthaginian general whose crossing of the Alps by elephant is depicted in a painting by Turner (8) |
| ARM | A limb one is said to be prepared to give away in order to convey the extent of one's desires or wishes (3) |
| THEFIGHTINGTEMERAIRE | ____, tugged to her last Berth to be broken up, 1838 is a painting by Turner |
| PETWORTH | - House; subject of paintings by Turner, a historic building in West Sussex with gardens and parkland designed by Capability Brown (8) |
| EARRING | A piece of jewellery, such as the pearl example in a notable oil painting by Johannes Vermeer (7) |
| VOULU | French for "wanted, wished", used to convey the idea of something being calculated, contrived, deliberate, feigned or lacking in spontaneity (5) |
| TRAIL | Beaten or blazed path in the wilds; or, a series of signs or clues such as footprints, spoor or line-shaped vaporous clouds marking the passage of a person, quarry or aircraft (5) |
| EPOS | A body of poetry that conveys the traditions of a society by treating some epic theme. |
| BLARNEY | Stone in Ireland said to convey the gift of persuasive talk (7) |
| IRONY | Use of words to convey the opposite of what they normally mean (5) |
| EMOTICON | It uses keyboard characters to convey the tone of an email or text (8) |
| APPEARED | Gave the impression of a paper made over by the editor (8) |
| JUMBO | Which London Zoo elephant was sold to an American circus in 1882, killed by a train in 1885, then stuffed and displayed? (5) |