| JUMBUCK | 16 down's old word for a sheep (7) |
| CLAY | 23-Down's old name |
| RAMPART | Defensive structure, or a form of trap for a sheep (7) |
| BERTRAM | Familiar name for a sheep (male) (7) |
| CABOOSE | Old word for a cookhouse, kitchen or stove on a ship's deck; a train's cabin car in the US; or, a bunkhouse for lumberjacks in Canada (7) |
| MEASURE | Quantity; unit such as a yard or a foot; a bar of music; an old word for a dance; or, poetic rhythm (7) |
| PARAGON | A model of excellence; a perfect diamond; an old word for a black marble; or, camlet for dressmaking or upholstery (7) |
| PARLOUR | Shop selling ice cream; old word for a sitting room; or, a building equipped for milking cows (7) |
| LUNETTE | Literally meaning "little moon", a crescent-shaped architectural recess occupied by a painting, window or relief sculpture; or, an old word for a half horseshoe (7) |
| GARLAND | An old word for a crown; a nautical coil or grommet of rope; a festoon or wreath of flowers and foliage; or, an anthology or florilegium of poems (7) |
| CABINET | Old word for a private room; a body of government advisors; or, a piece of furniture fronted by doors with drawers or shelves (7) |
| MYSTERY | From the Greek for "close the eyes", an ancient secret ceremony witnessed only by the initiated; an old word for a craft or a trade guild; an enigmatic person or thing; or, a novel, play etc based on |
| HARBOUR | Old word for a refuge or shelter that came to mean a haven for ships (7) |
| DEMIREP | Old word for a woman of a dubious reputation (7) |
| HERBARY | Old word for a type of physic garden for the cultivation of plants such as rosemary, lemon balm, thyme, hyssop and camomile (7) |
| CLAPPER | Tongue or striker of a bell; or, an old word for a rabbit hole (7) |
| CHEQUER | An old word for a chessboard; its pattern of alternating colours; or, one of the pieces used in draughts or in a game similar to halma (7) |
| RECEIPT | Action of obtaining something; a counterfoil, proof of purchase or quittance; or, an old word for a culinary formula in cookery (7) |
| LATTICE | From an old word for a thin slat of wood, a decorative arrangement of criss-crossed strips forming an espalier, fretwork, grating, grille, mesh, piecrust or trellis; or, a window with diamond-shaped p |
| DAMOSEL | Males do, unfortunately, employ an old word for a maid (7) |