| DECRIMINALISED | No longer treated as an offence |
| HER | Woman treated as an object? |
| TOOCLEVERBYHALF | Fetch over boy all treated as an arrogant know-all? (3,6,2,4) |
| DARKEN | So Koran ended or was treated as an unwelcome visitor (6,4,4) |
| ONESDOOR | So Koran ended or was treated as an unwelcome visitor (6,4,4) |
| RELIC | The physical remains of a saint or other holy person, treated as an object of veneration (5) |
| EXCEPTION | Omission that may be taken as an offence (9) |
| CASINO | Where gambling may be seen as an offence in company |
| UMBRAGE | It may be taken as an offence |
| MADELIGHTOF | Treated as of no consequence (4,5,2) |
| NUCLEAR | An ulcer treated as subatomic (7) |
| INSULT | At home, lust treated as offence (6) |
| MONOPOLYMONEY | Large sums treated as if of no real value (8,5) |
| LIONISED | Treated as a hero, is no different in a song of Schubert's (8) |
| LIONIZATION | Being treated as a hero in isolation is no good (11) |
| DUAL | From Greek for "two", a word for a pair of units treated as one, such as a bivalent atom, couple of people, duo of notes or product of two vectors (4) |
| FETED | Treated as a celebrity |
| FANTASTIC | A fact isn't treated as very odd (9) |
| OUTPATIENT | One treated as a visitor |
| DISEASE | See AIDS treated as illness (7) |