| GASPER | A cheap smoke or the one smoking it? (6) |
| POUFFE | Scots or dialect word for blows, gusts, mild explosions, wafts or whiffs of air, dust, gunpowder, smoke or the like; shots; or, hairdressers' powder pads (6) |
| UPIN | Words before "smoke" or "the air" |
| CURER | One smoking at work is a successful medic (5) |
| PETNAME | In the afternoon, ultimately come across one smoking sausage, maybe |
| ELROPO | Cheap smoke, in slang |
| STOGIE | Cheap smoke |
| PUTTINGOUT | Stopping one's smoking or forcing to leave (7,3) |
| CHEROOT | Revolutionary base - that one's smoking? |
| STOGY | Cheap smoke |
| WREATH | Circlet of seasonal winter greenery placed on a door or a table during the festive season; a niveous drift formed in a blizzard; or, a curl of smoke or cloud (6) |
| REEFER | Being free, you have little hesitation in smoking it (6) |
| SMUDGE | A choking smoke; or, a smear (6) |
| BILLOW | Swelling mass, as of smoke or sound (6) |
| SIGNAL | Word after "smoke" or "Bat" |
| WISP | A handful of hay or straw; a small broom; a twisted bunch used as a torch; a strand of hair; a streak of smoke; or, one of slight or delicate stature (4) |
| LIGHTHOUSE | Structure with a lantern room such as the one at Portland Bill or the one situated on Longstone Rock formerly looked after by Grace Darling's father (10) |
| STOUR | Any of several rivers in England, such as the one flowing through Wiltshire, the Blackmore Vale and Dorset or the one rising in Cambridgeshire and coursing through Dedham Vale (5) |
| MAN | He could be the one in the iron mask or the one for all seasons |
| HANGGLIDER | Unpowered flying apparatus or the one who flies it (4-6) |