| BARTAILEDGODWIT | Wading bird sometimes known as a barwit (3-6,6) |
| STINT | Word for an allowance; an allotted period of work; or, a little wading bird, sometimes called a peep (5) |
| ONEPARENTFAMILY | Kind of household to arrange tea for men in play (3-6,6) |
| ICEHOCKEYPLAYER | E.g. Dundee Rocket or Paisley Pirate (3-6,6) |
| SEAISLANDCOTTON | Fine-quality yarn grown off the southern US (3-6,6) |
| REDHEADEDLEAGUE | 14's left man, possibly dead, for three miles at sea (3-6,6) |
| TOBYJUG | Shaped into the form of a seated person, this ceramic container is sometimes known as a 'fillpot' (4,3) |
| TURKEY | Gallinaceous bird with a fanshaped tail, of which the male is sometimes known as a gobbler (6) |
| ICESTORM | Winter weather event sometimes known as a silver thaw (3,5) |
| SAMARA | Winged achene (dry one-seeded fruit) of trees such as the ash and maple, sometimes known as a key (6) |
| IRIS | Garden flower sometimes known as a flag (4) |
| TAMARILLO | Fruit sometimes known as a tree tomato (9) |
| DINGBAT | An ornament, character or spacer used in typesetting, sometimes known as a 'printer's ornament' (7) |
| DOVE | Bird sometimes roosting in a cote or a culverhouse, used as a symbol of peace or of the constellation Columba (4) |
| BARNOWL | Nocturnal bird sometimes found in a hayloft (4,3) |
| PARROT | Tropical bird sometimes kept as a pet (6) |
| TRINGA | Small bird sometimes referred to as a wren-warbler (6) |
| FLAMINGO | Pink bird sometimes used as a lawn ornament |
| TERN | Bird sometimes called a sea swallow |
| TIT | Bird, sometimes blue, great or bearded (3) |