| HAPPINESS | "I have learned to seek my ___ by limiting my desires, rather than in attempting to satisfy them." - John Stuart Mill (9) |
| APES | Some of them have learned to sign |
| WISHFUL | (Of thinking), based on desire rather than fact |
| ROSAPARKS | "I have learned over the years that when one's mind is made up, this diminishes fear; knowing what must be done does away with fear." She is best known for sparking the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955- |
| TRAVELS | Sonnet 50: How heavy do I journey on the way / When what I seek, my weary ___ end, / Doth teach that ease and that repose to say, / "Thus far the miles are measured from thy friend!" |
| NOTIF | "It yearns me ____ men my garments wear; / Such outward things dwell not in my desires" (Henry V) |
| ATTACKED | Took the initiative in attempting to score in football, e.g. (8) |
| FALSETTO | Form of vocal production used by male singers to extend their range upwards by limiting the vibratio |
| INTERMARRY | Merry art in attempting to wed into another culture (10) |
| DEFENSIVELY | Defy the Elves, in attempting to act protectively (11) |
| DRYLOT | Place to fatten livestock by limiting roughage |
| ENCLAIR | A French phrase used to denote a telegram or message is written in ordinary language, rather than in cipher/code (2,5) |
| OENEUS | Mythical king in ancient Greece, said to have learned the secret of wine-making (6) |
| OPPIDAN | At Eton College, a pupil who boards in town rather than in the school itself (7) |
| NERDS | People "who invested their personalities in being clever rather than in being good company," per Rosa Lyster |
| TRADERS | It takes a good deal to satisfy them |
| EXAMINERS | Former pitmen hold key: students hope to satisfy them |
| RENEGADES | Such turncoats require a range of seed to satisfy them (9) |
| SATE | Wine taster turned around, swallowing to satisfy them |
| MODELS | Such mannequins need 50 modes to satisfy them |