| EKKA | Word, from Hindi's "one", for a one-horse Indian carriage, saving a passenger from a walk or tiring run (4) |
| HERO | 1992 American film starring Dustin Hoffman and Geena Davis about a pickpocket who rescues passengers from a crashed airliner |
| HACKNEYCARRIAGES | Taxis licensed to collect passengers from a taxi rank (7,9) |
| TONGA | Southampton garage containing a light Indian carriage (5) |
| MCGREGOR | Graeme, former sidecar passenger from 20 Down who went to win two TTs in 1984. (8) |
| EKKAS | Innovative clock work idea - bus terminals for Indian carriages (5) |
| INDIC | Hindi's language group |
| DISTEND | Expand some of Hindi's ten dialects (7) |
| SRI | Hindi's "mister" |
| COTTAGE | Word, derived from a medieval term for a one-roomed peasant dwelling or a name for a dove-house, for a small country dwelling (7) |
| MAILLOT | French word for a jersey worn for road cycle racing; another word for a one-piece swimsuit; or, tights worn for ballet or gymnastics (7) |
| TURN | A revolution or spin; a change of direction; a walk; or, a spell of work (4) |
| SLOG | A snail's-pace plod, trudge or tiring trek; a strenuous spell of exhausting graft; a hard hit; or, a heavy blow (4) |
| SNIPE | Known collectively as a walk or a wisp, a wading bird related to the woodcock found in marshes and wetlands (5) |
| SHOTGLASS | Container for a one-gulp beverage whose first word is a synonym for "attempt": 2 wds. |
| BROUGHAM | A one-horse, four-wheeled carriage named after Henry, a 19th-century Lord Chancellor (8) |
| WAGTAILS | Sprightly birds such as the pied "Polly dishwashers" that are known collectively as a walk or a volery (8) |
| SNAIL | Known collectively as a walk or an escargatoire, a mollusc that is synonymous with anything slow (5) |
| SALVAGE | The action of saving a ship or its cargo, or a payment made for doing so (7) |
| DIRT | What a dog may track inside from a walk |