| CHYPRE | A family of perfumes defined by the scent of oakmoss (6) |
| LICHEN | Oakmoss, e.g. |
| INDICATOR | A blinker; or, a species, such as the Adonis blue, barn owl, English bluebell, oakmoss or turtledove, whose absence, abundance or presence reflects a specific environmental condition in a habitat (9) |
| RODRIGO | Blind from the age of three, a Spanish composer whose guitar concerto Concierto de Aranjuez was inspired by the scent of the magnolias in the gardens of the Royal Palace of Aranjuez (7) |
| GANDHI | An Indian family name, meaning a seller of perfumes |
| MUSKOX | Nothing but a kiss for the scent of the animal (4,2) |
| SCENTS | Smell, for example, say of perfumes (6) |
| AROMAS | Smells esp. of perfumes or cooking food (6) |
| IRISES | The scent of what flower did D.H. Lawrence find sickening? (6) |
| TASTER | From which to get the scent of an old sixpence (6) |
| BOUQUET | Favourable comment elicited by the scent of wine? (7) |
| DETECT | Catch the scent of |
| WOODSY | Like the scent of pine |
| METRE | One ten-millionth of the distance between the North Pole and the equator (as defined by the French Academy of Sciences in 1791) |
| AMBERGRIS | Waxy substance, secreted by the intestinal tract of the sperm whale, used in the manufacture of perfumes (9) |
| SPEEDOFLIGHT | A fundamental constant of nature and physics defined by the vacuum propagation rate of electromagnetic radiation, exactly 299,792,458 metres per second (5,2,5) |
| SWEETSPOT | Area defined by the center of percussion and the vibration node, more familiarly |
| CHIN | Part of the face that's defined by the jaw |
| FIGS | Used as the scent of some luxury candles, fruits of a tree in the mulberry family, eaten straight from the vine, dried, poached in wine or baked in tarts (4) |
| URBANAREA | A region of high human population density defined by the US Census Bureau that ignores local administrative boundaries |