| JADE | A hard ornamental stone, typically green (4) |
| TOPAZ | Precious stone, typically colourless, yellow, or pale blue (5) |
| SAPPHIRES | Precious stones, typically blue (9) |
| AGATE | Hard ornamental stone (5) |
| ONYX | Sexy novel about securing ornamental stone (4) |
| HERBAGE | In here, a container is typically green |
| SEPAL | Any of the separate parts of the calyx of a flower, typically green and leaf-like (5) |
| MANTIS | Praying ____, a carnivorous, typically green insect of warm and tropical regions (6) |
| BAIZE | A typically green, felt-like material used for covering snooker and card tables (5) |
| GARDENHOSE | Typically green tube |
| AVENTURINE | Form of typically green quartz, often scintillating due to inclusion of mica (10) |
| SERPENTINE | What is a lake in London's Hyde Park and a soft greenish ornamental stone? (10) |
| AGATES | Ornamental stones consisting of a (typically banded) hard variety of chalcedony (6) |
| TRACERY | In architecture, ornamental stone openwork of bars and ribs supporting the glass lights in a Gothic window (7) |
| MALACHITE | Bright green mineral consisting of hydrated copper carbonate, used as an ornamental stone (9) |
| TIGERSEYE | Golden-brown ornamental stone |
| PROPAGATE | Spread buttress with ornamental stone |
| AGITATE | Get excited, setting it in ornamental stone (7) |
| ABROGATE | Relative breaking ornamental stone in scrap |
| ALABASTER | White ornamental stone (9) |