| LOLLIPOPMAN | Male helping children cross a road (8,3) |
| UNICEF | Organisation for helping children and mothers in developing countries (6) |
| LOLLIPOPLADY | Woman who helps children cross busy roads (8,4) |
| JAYWALK | Carelessly cross a road |
| FLYOVER | In an aircraft cross a road intersection (7) |
| GUARDED | Wary guys edge, both half-cut, to cross a road (7) |
| STEWARDS | Cooks must cross a road for high-flying workers (8) |
| VIADUCT | Way to cross a road |
| SUBWAY | Underground passage or tunnel enabling pedestrians to cross a road or railway (6) |
| SUBWAYS | Underground passages or tunnels enabling pedestrians to cross a road or railway (7) |
| BERNBRIDGES | Ways to cross a river in Switzerland? |
| CARNET | French word for a notebook; a booklet of tickets/transport coupons; or, a customs permit authorising a motorist to cross a certain frontier (6) |
| CRUCIFER | From the Latin for "cross", a person carrying a small rood in a church procession; or, a brassica with four-petalled cross-shaped flowers, such as broccoli, cabbage, collard, kale, mustard or turnip ( |
| CRUX | A cross; a southern constellation symbolised by said figure; a vital point or stage; a baffling problem or puzzle; or, the hardest point of a climb (4) |
| ABYSS | Did a seaman have a yard on board ship to cross a deep gorge? (5) |
| MARKET | Similar to a charter fair and traditionally held near a carved cross, a town's periodic gathering for the sale of artisan food, livestock, local farm produce, plants and suchlike (6) |
| STYLE | Sounds like a way to cross a fence with a certain elegance! (5) |
| STILE | One lets you cross a fence on a farm |
| CATAMARAN | A boat can cross a river (9) |
| STEPPINGSTONE | A rock to cross a creek |