| JOURNEY | Archaic word for a day's work or travel; a voyage; a set of colliery trucks; or, a herd of giraffes (7) |
| FARE | Word for a journey; the price of said voyage; a passenger; provisions for the table; or, food of a certain kind (4) |
| ETAPE | French word for a day's march, a storehouse, rations issued to troops or a stage of a cycle race (5) |
| RAG | Informal word for a low-quality newspaper; or, a herd of colts (3) |
| WRESTLERS | It's all in a day's work (or sport!) to them (9) |
| DARG | Scottish term for a day's work (4) |
| TOUR | Sightseeing voyage, a ... of the islands |
| CRECHE | From "manger", a word for a day nursery; or, a foundling hospital (6) |
| GANG | Company of labourers; a group of robbers; a herd of elk; or, a set of wall switches or sockets (4) |
| ZEAL | Sharing its root with "jealousy", a word for intense or fanatical ardour; or, a herd or "dazzle" of zebra (4) |
| JACKAL | From "man of the people" or "lad", word for a professional steeplechaser; or, an operator of beer taps, computers, discs/records, trucks or other machines, vehicles or things (6) |
| VAN | A winnowing basket; a windmill sail; a wing; a shovel for testing ore; a cargo truck; or, a house on wheels (3) |
| TRIP | Word for an excursion, a stumble, hallucinatory experience, a herd of goats or a flock of wildfowl (4) |
| PARADE | A row of shops; a procession; a herd of elephants; or, a line of goslings led by their parent (6) |
| TRUNK | A box for fish; a chest for storage or travel; an elephant's proboscis; a peashooter; or, a speaking tube (5) |
| PALLET | From "spade, shovel", something flat, such as a wooden blade for shaping clay/plaster; a straw mattress; a platform moved with a fork-lift truck; or, a brush for spreading gold leaf (6) |
| TAILGATE | A hinged door/flap at the rear of a hatchback, shooting brake or truck; or, a style of jazz trombone playing (8) |
| MEMORY | Faculty that can be improved or aided with mnemonics; or, another word for a herd of elephants (6) |
| ALE | Traditional name for beer brewed without hops; or, an archaic word for a feast or festival derived from said liquor drunk (3) |
| WAYFARER | Literary word for a person who journeys or travels on foot; or, a classic style of Ray-Ban sunglasses (8) |