| LAPPET | A small hanging flap or piece of lace, etc, such as one dangling from a headdress (6) |
| JABOT | Frill of lace etc. worn in front of a shirt or dress (5) |
| UVULA | Hanging flap of flesh in the mouth (5) |
| NOOSE | One dangling on end of hangman's rope |
| EARRING | One dangling could become angrier |
| PLATFORM | From "ground plan" , 'flat shape", a raised level, surface of planks etc, such as a stage for speakers, a place for mounting guns, the floor of a bus or a pavement for rail passengers; or, a basis of |
| GROUND | Plain surface to which ceramic decoration, embroidery, etching, paint or relievo is applied; or, the mesh supporting a piece of lace (6) |
| EARBOB | Bit of jewelry dangling from a lobe |
| BED | A berth, bunk, palliasse, shakedown etc, such as Shakespeare's "second- best" example which he bequeathed to his wife; or, something thusly flat, such as a garden plot of roses, a layer of oysters or |
| BRELOQUE | A lovely gem of a French word for a fancy pendant in the form of a charm for a Victorian bracelet or an ornamental fob dangling from a watch chain (8) |
| AIGRET | A long plume worn on hats or as a headdress |
| EYELET | Small hole for lace, etc |
| BOOK | From the Old English for "beech", a bibliophilic item printed with a story, poem etc, such as A Child's Christmas in Wales, The Chimes, Little Women or A Visit from St. Nicholas (4) |
| BUSTLE | Flap or pad in dress |
| TAB | A small flap or strip; a loop for drawing a stage curtain; the drape itself; a cigarette; an insignia on a staff officer's collar; an Oxonian's name for a Cambridge student; or, in the US, a restauran |
| TURBAN | A headdress worn by male Sikhs (6) |
| MITRED | Wearing a headdress ready for a corner joint |
| ALPACA | Woollen material for a headdress the French sent back (6) |
| CROWN | A simple garland or wreath as a headdress originally, later a more grandiose jewelled diadem of a king or queen; or, the top of an arch, cut gem, hat, head, pineapple or tree (5) |
| FLOWERSHOW | A display or exhibition of plants etc., such as that held annually in Chelsea since 1912 (6,4) |