| RANCHERIA | A herdsmen's huts or a village (Sp) (9) |
| HORN | John Halpern loses capital twice, producing Swiss herdsmen's instrument (9) |
| ALPEN | John Halpern loses capital twice, producing Swiss herdsmen's instrument (9) |
| TAROT | Fateful cards show up in a hut or a theatre (5) |
| CABIN | Room on a ship containing one or more of the beds described in 49 Across; a hut; or, a signal box (5) |
| WICK | Central cord in a candle; or, dialect for a dairy farm, hamlet or a village (4) |
| GREEN | Sharing its root with "grass", the verdant colour of growing herbage; or, a graminaceous piece of land, such as a golf course or a village centre (5) |
| BOOTH | A hut or small shop of basic construction; a telephone kiosk; a box office; or, a stall at a fair or market (5) |
| YMCA | Gym setting, or a Village People hit |
| KRAAL | South African term for a village of huts or an enclosure for livestock (5) |
| BERTHS | Bunks or beds in ships, trains, shepherd's huts or caravans (6) |
| STREET | Paved road lined on either side with houses, shops etc; or, a village near Glastonbury in Somerset (6) |
| ENCAMPMENT | A place of temporary accommodation consisting of huts or tents, often for troops (10) |
| SKENE | A Highlander's dagger; or, meaning "hut" or "tent", a structure at the back of an ancient Greek stage, originally a dressing room (5) |
| CABINET | Word for a hut or small room first, later a case or cupboard for displaying valuables or works of art (7) |
| CAMP | Group of huts or tents (4) |
| SHACKS | Roughly built huts or cabins (6) |
| SKEOS | Word used in Orkney and Shetland for huts or sheds (5) |
| STRAWY | Like some huts or hats |
| WIGWAMS | Dome-shaped huts or tents (7) |