| AROUSER | What gets one going? A cunning plan of entering, right |
| OWLET | Little hooter is what gets one going, feeble learner admitted (5) |
| ATFORTY | When one's innings really gets going? A time to double score (2,5) |
| TREADER | Student's last book, one going a step at a time |
| SCULLS | They help to keep one going a float (6) |
| WOOERS | Ones going a-courting |
| PROSPER | Get on front of stage, entering right |
| FREUD | Analyst entering right into long-standing quarrel (5) |
| INTRO | Entering right into the opening passage |
| SERPENTINE | Word used to describe a cunning plan, a lake in Hyde Park, a mathematical curve, a river, an S-shaped figure in riding, a track and a wall - all sinuous, twisting or winding, "like a snake" (10) |
| PLOY | A cunning plan to gain advantage; a manoeuvre or gambit in a game or conversation; or, a hobby, job etc with which one is occupied (4) |
| LOVEAFFAIR | What gets one amazingly alive for embracing a female? (4,6) |
| AORIST | Tense from a profit but that which gets one going for good |
| PEDESTRIANCROSSING | What gets one over uninspiring Atlantic voyage? |
| BITE | Sting gets one going into Brown Thomas with sweetheart (4) |
| MOTIVE | I'm arranging vote - it gets one going (6) |
| MARCHING | Month in Spring finally gets one going (8) |
| WIMPLE | Nun's outfit hides a politician, in a cunning plan (6) |
| WHEEZE | A cunning plan to make one breathe with difficulty (6) |
| LOINCHOP | Cut of meat going a little way into a closed circuit (4,4) |