| ESPALIER | A fruit tree trained to grow flat, often against a wall |
| DIVAN | *Seat often against a wall |
| BUREAU | Foreign Office is often against The Wall (6) |
| TUMBLER | Stem-less drinking glass having a flat, often thick bottom (7) |
| MAISONETTE | Flat often with its own front door (10) |
| BEDSITS | Small flats often occupied by students (7) |
| ESPALIERS | Ornamental shrubs or trees trained to grow flat against a wall (9) |
| ESPALIERED | French description of a fruit tree or ornamental shrub with branches trained to grow flat against a garden wall (10) |
| BONSAI | Small tree trained to grow in a pot |
| WALLFRUIT | Espalier trained to grow flat against brickwork; or, the apples, figs, pears, plums, quinces or other edible crop grown on said fan-shaped tree (4,5) |
| SQUASH | Word for a close crowd; a crushed mass; fruit cordial; a game named for one of its early rubber spheres that scrunched against a wall; a gourd; a social gathering; or, according to Shakespeare, an unr |
| TRAIN | Cause a fruit tree, for example, to grow in a particular shape (5) |
| CORDON | Single-stemmed fruit tree grown at an angle of 45 degrees flat against a wall (6) |
| MINARETTE | Series of fruit trees trained into columnar shape - treat mine differently! (9) |
| TRAP | Hang a codling moth one in a fruit tree, and set a humane or cheesy one near stored veg and bulbs! (4) |
| APRICOT | A fruit-tree or pair I planted in a small bed |
| BLOSSOM | A flower on a fruit tree (7) |
| PINEAPPLE | A fruit tree - fruit is found lying underneath it (9) |
| GUAVA | Name a fruit tree, native to tropical and subtropical America (5) |
| PELOTA | Originally Basque court sport using a basket-like racket to hurl a ball against a wall |