| FLAPPER | Flighty young woman of the 1920s (7) |
| SLOANERANGER | Fashionable young woman of the upper classes (6,6) |
| BUGATTI | Which car maker produced the most expensive car of the 1920s? (7) |
| ARTDECO | Trade off business in the style of the 1920s (3,4) |
| CLARICE | ___ Cliff, pottery artist of the 1920s and 1930s (7) |
| DESTIJL | Group of Dutch artists and architects of the 1920s which included Mondrian and Van Doesburg |
| LALIQUE | French jeweller and glassmaker whose moulded glassware of the 1920s and 1930s came to epitomise art deco (4,7) |
| TRAVERS | Ben ____ was the main writer of the 1920s and 1930s Aldwych farces |
| CHEMISE | French word for a shirt, which is used to refer to a loose-fitting shirt-like nightgown, smock or undergarment; a priest's alb or surplice; a slip; or, an unwaisted dress of the 1920s (7) |
| BATHTUB | Gin source of the 1920s? |
| BAUHAUS | German art school of the 1920s |
| MODELTS | Electrical best-sellers of the Twenties |
| HOURI | Beautiful young woman of paradise (5) |
| SALLY | Flat round cake, usually served hot, said to be named after a young woman of Bath who first sold them (5,4) |
| LUNN | Flat round cake, usually served hot, said to be named after a young woman of Bath who first sold them (5,4) |
| SALLYLUNN | Flat round cake, usually served hot, said to be named after a young woman of Bath who first sold them |
| DEBUTANTE | A young woman of upperclass background who is presented to society, usually at a formal ball (9) |
| RUMBA | By the end of the Twenties this Afro-Cuban dance had hit the ballrooms of the world, just as the tan |
| SHIMMY | A spirited shoulder-shaking jazz dance of the 1920s; a sway of the hips; or, a wobble of a car's wheels (6) |
| GRACECOSSINGTONSMITH | Which leading Australian painter of the 1920s and '30s painted The Sock Knitter (1915), considered a |