| LLANERO | (S America) Inhabitant of a grassy plain or steppe (7) |
| AMERIND | US inhabitant aboard steamer in Delaware |
| FLAT | Word for something even or level, such as a ballet shoe, grassy plain or line on a monitor when the heart stops beating; or, an apartment (4) |
| LLANO | Spanish word for extensive grassy treeless plain or steppe (5) |
| HABITAT | Savanna or steppe |
| PRAIRIE | Nissan MPV on a grassy plain? (7) |
| REPUTED | Well known to be planted in a grassy sort of bed (7) |
| TUFT | Word with a bunch of meanings including a beard, a feathery crest, a grassy clump, a loop in a rug, a tassel or a wisp of a squirrel's fluffy tail/ear (4) |
| VEGETAL | A grassy, herbaceous taste of wine |
| AVERAGE | Mediocre area initially within a grassy roadside (7) |
| YOGHURT | Yummy, healthy dairy food that comes in a tub. It can be plain or flavoured (7) |
| VANILLA | Plain or having no interesting feature (7) |
| BAYLEAF | Horse on a grassy field is initially fed something Laurel dropped (3,4) |
| EXPLAIN | Make plain or clear (7) |
| BUZZATI | Dino, Italian author of the novel The Tartar Steppe (7) |
| SAVANNAH | A grassy plain in tropical or subtropical regions, usually with few trees (8) |
| ROLYPOLY | A head-over-heels forward gambol; a game of tumbling down a grassy slope; a baked or steamed pudding of suet pastry and jam; or, a podge (4-4) |
| UKRAINE | European country noted for its rich forest and steppe habitats (7) |
| CRACKERS | Word for a hard type of plain or savoury biscuit; or, something equally as crisp, crunchy, shattery or snappable, such as peanut brittle, a hard nutty filling for confectionery or a scratching of friz |
| COSSACK | Steppe cavalryman (7) |