| MEASURES | Finds just the extent of the action taken |
| MEASURE | Having only the backing of America in the action taken (7) |
| TRANSACTION | Rant about the actions taken? That's their business |
| LOUDNESS | The extent of the volume (8) |
| MARGIN | The extent of the profit will spoil the spirit of it (6) |
| NEAREAST | Originally, the greatest extent of the Ottoman Empire |
| GRADIENT | From "step", an incline, such as that of a road or a train track; the degree of said slope; the extent of steepness of a graph at any point; or, a progressive blend from one colour to another (8) |
| WONDERED | Thought to have secured victory right in the middle of the action (8) |
| VANGUARD | Transport security man at the front of the action (8) |
| ACRES | An account given by the sappers will show the extent of the field (5) |
| CABLESLENGTH | The extent of the telegram showing nautical measure (6,6) |
| SCOPE | The extent of the copse (5) |
| DOMESDAY | Record of the census ordered by Norman boss, William the Conqueror, to establish the extent of his new possessions, ... Book |
| SHEPHERD | This term describes the minor moons Pandora, Prometheus, Janus, Epimetheus, and Pan, because of their ability to constrain the extent of Saturn's rings through gravitational forces. The term is also u |
| MEASURED | Saw the extent of certain alterations made to the outside (8) |
| QUOTIENT | A measure of the extent of something (8) |
| DIVIDEND | Piece of the action did stop around four (8) |
| WINGSPAN | Paul and Linda criticise the extent of magpie, perhaps (8) |
| LENGTHEN | Increase the extent of (8) |
| MUSCLEIN | Grab a share (of the action) (6,2) |