| INSURANCE | Policy of turning to run a in case (9) |
| FORETASTE | An example of turning to try again (9) |
| RANGEPOLE | Rod called before turning to run away |
| BANNISTER | Roger -; athlete who, in 1954, became the first person to run a mile in under four minutes (9) |
| CHAIRLIFT | It may take you to run a rich resort, Jack (9) |
| GENERATOR | Plant groups, say, get to run a dynamo (9) |
| SOAPOPERA | Really a mystery writer, keeping quiet to run a TV show |
| MARYBARRA | GM CEO who in 2013 became the first woman to run a Big Three automaker |
| STARBOARD | Right people to run a business brilliantly! |
| ELOPE | English staff turning to run away |
| TREVOR | Voter turning to run with Strike Back actor Eve (6) |
| RECOURSE | Act of turning to someone for help about racetrack (8) |
| COTTA | Cost of turning to Authorised headings priest might wear (5) |
| DETERMINATION | Resolution made me tired of turning to the country (13) |
| GORGONS | Stheno, Euryale and Medusa, the fanged monsters with the handy knack of turning to stone anyone who |
| MEW | Kitten's sound... or to run a finger along one's jawline to decline to answer a question, in slang |
| ELECTRA | Choose to run a complex of such a type (7) |
| ROGERBANNISTER | First to run a sub-4 minute mile, in 1954 (5,9) |
| ARTUNION | Model in to run a lottery in Perth, perhaps |
| NOTME | Response to "Who wants to run a bunch of boring errands?" |