| BORROWING | Word borrowed from another language |
| LOANWORD | Word borrowed from another language |
| BORROWEDWORD | Word borrowed from another language |
| CALQUE | Word borrowed from another language |
| IMPORTEDWORD | Word borrowed from another language |
| LOANTRANSLATION | Word borrowed from another language |
| NEOLOGY | Word borrowed from another language |
| PARONYM | Word borrowed from another language |
| ONLOAN | Borrowed from another museum |
| ECHT | Genuine (word borrowed from German) (4) |
| KISMET | Fate or destiny, a word borrowed from Turkish |
| AMOUR | What word borrowed from French describes a love affair, especially a secret one? (5) |
| DINGHY | Word, borrowed from Hindi and similar to an adjective meaning "drab, dull, gloomy", for a little boat propelled by oars/outboard motor; or, a small inflatable life raft (6) |
| TRANSLITERATE | Write (word) in letters from another language - narrates title (anag) (13) |
| TRANSLATION | Text rendered from another language |
| INTERPRET | To make out the meaning of or translate from another language (9) |
| SIMPATICO | Italian word, borrowed for English usage to describe a feeling of fellow-feeling and hence likabilit |
| POMP | Word, borrowed by Sir Edward Elgar for a series of marches, for ceremonial splendour, magnificence, ostentatious display or pageantry (4) |
| MACARONI | This word is borrowed from a regional Tuscan Italian word meaning "tubular pasta" (with an earlier meaning of "stuffed pasta of various shapes"). It may have deeper roots in Greek. In the 18th century |
| TOMBOLA | This (chiefly British) word is borrowed from an Neapolitan Italian word meaning "game resembling bingo played with cards bearing rows of numbers." Its first known use in English is 1835. |