| PRESSRELEASE | Certain P.R., in two different senses |
| COD | Certain P.O. delivery |
| RUSSETS | Certain P.E.I. exports |
| AMI | Friend found in Amiens, in two different senses |
| ACH | Exclamation in Aachen, in two different senses |
| EAU | Water in Bordeaux, in two different senses |
| PIGS | Litter producers, in two different senses |
| BAND | Wedding feature, in two different senses |
| SALSA | It may involve dips, in two different senses |
| NAG | Ride, in two different senses |
| BOW | Something a violinist might take, in two different senses |
| ZEUGMA | Figure of speech in which an adjective or verb is applied to two nouns in different senses, as in '[they] covered themselves with dust and glory' (Mark Twain, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) |
| SEPARABLENESS | Property of sheep and goats in story, in different senses (13) |
| ESCAPE | This is two points, in one sense, followed by a third in a different sense? Getaway! (6) |
| JOKERS | They're cards in different senses |
| WINGS | What planes, museums and bar menus all have, in different senses |
| CHILLI | In different senses, it may be perceived as hot or cold (6) |
| FOULLINE | Baseball or basketball marking (or, in different senses, the first word + the last word of rank and file) |
| HIGHANDMIGHTY | Haughty, or in a different sense, like the top words in 3-, 9-, 23and 28- |
| SYNAESTHESIA | Sensation crossing over between different senses |