S: (n) Big Ben (clock in the clock tower of the Houses of Parliament, London)
S: (n) Newgate (a former prison in London notorious for its unsanitary conditions and burnt down in riots in 1780; a new prison was built on the same spot but was torn down in 1902)
S: (n) Tower of London (a fortress in London on the Thames; used as a palace and a state prison and now as a museum containing the crown jewels)
S: (n) Fleet Street (a street in central London where newspaper offices are situated)
S: (n) Harley Street (a street in central London where the consulting rooms of many physicians and surgeons are located)
S: (n) Lombard Street (a street in central London containing many of the major London banks)
S: (n) Whitehall (a wide street in London stretching from Trafalgar Square to the Houses of Parliament; site of many government offices)
S: (n) Trafalgar Square (a square in central London where there is a memorial to Admiral Nelson)
S: (n) City of London, the City (the part of London situated within the ancient boundaries; the commercial and financial center of London)
S: (n) Greenwich (a borough of Greater London on the Thames; zero degrees of longitude runs through Greenwich; time is measured relative to Greenwich Mean Time)
S: (n) Bloomsbury (a city district of central London laid out in garden squares)
S: (n) Soho (a city district of central London now noted for restaurants and nightclubs)
S: (n) Wembley (a southeastern part of Greater London that is the site of the English national soccer stadium)
S: (n) West End (the part of west central London containing the main entertainment and shopping areas)
S: (n) Westminster, City of Westminster (a borough of Greater London on the Thames; contains Buckingham Palace and the Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey)
S: (n) Pall Mall (a fashionable street in London noted for its many private clubs)
S: (n) Wimbledon (a suburb of London and the headquarters of the club where annual international tennis championships are played on grass courts)