| JUSTIFY | To fit into line's quite dodgy, with only one following |
| OBSERVE | Watch ever so dodgy with second-class interior |
| QUELL | Put down lines quite rejecting it at first |
| ETIQUETTE | Quite dodgy to remove 1-down's envelope (9) |
| LANDGIRL | Wartime worker with doctor going back into lines |
| LOVERBOY | Nothing Derek put into lines for Romeo (5-3) |
| RAMPART | Dash into lines for defence |
| TRIGRAM | One with three lines of equipment to fit into vehicle |
| TENON | I needed a piece of wood to fit into a mortise, so I got Saul, a leading carpenter from Launceston, to make one for me (5) |
| POCKETBOOK | A cahier, diary, jotter, note-pad etc, small enough to fit into one's placket; a police officer's "PNB"; a wallet for money, hence one's finances/fisc; or, in the US, a lady's clutch or purse (10) |
| WANNABEE | A person who tries to be famous to fit into a group (8) |
| ROISTER | Party, hard one to fit into schedule |
| TENONED | Having a projection to fit into a mortice to form a joint (7) |
| TENONS | Pieces of wood shaped to fit into mortises to form joints |
| SHOEHORN | Adjusted hose connected to warning device to fit into a tight space (8) |
| MALE | Made to fit into a recessed part |
| BRIDETOBE | Future wife belatedly beginning crash diet to fit into dress (5-2-2) |
| SCANDAL | About to fit into shoe, which is an outrage (7) |
| ALSO | Too large to fit into a small circle (4) |
| GRAVID | Expecting Bible to fit into framework |