| NEB | A nose or snout |
| SNITCH | Slang word for a nose; or, a canary, mole, rat, squeaker, squealer, stag, stool pigeon or other characteristically nosy nark or snout (6) |
| FINISHINGPOST | What you have to reach first, by a nose or more, to win the Guineas or Oaks (9,4) |
| SNIP | A bargain; a cinch; a cut with scissors; the sound thus made; a share; a shred; a small white patch on a horse or pony's nose; or, a tailor (4) |
| BOUQUET | From "bush, wood", word for a clump of arbors originally, now a bunch of flowers; the aroma, nose or perfume of a fragrance/scent, liqueur or wine; a compliment or expression of praise; or, a rose/wed |
| BILL | Platypus' beak-like rostrum or snout; or, a narrow promontory (4) |
| BARBEL | A fleshy filament growing from the mouth or snout of a fish (6) |
| PROBOSCIS | The long flexible trunk or snout of some mammals such as the elephant or tapir |
| HOOTER | Conk or snout! (6) |
| BEAK | A bird's rhamphotheca-covered bill; an octopus, squid or turtle's rostrum; a teacher at Eton; one's nose; or, a bucket's pouring lip (4) |
| SNOOT | A stuck-up nose; or, a snobbish sniffy person or nose-in-the air sort (5) |
| NOSES | Fronts of aircraft; projecting edges of steps; nozzles; or, snouts (5) |
| SWORDS | Blades figuratively turned into ploughshares when devoting resources to peaceful, rather than warlike, ends; or, snouts of xiphias (6) |
| AROMA | Nose, or a brief description of one? |
| AIL | Have a runny nose or headache, maybe |
| OAK | Tree in the genus Quercus; or, the smoky nose or flavour of wine aged in some wooden barrels (3) |
| SYMPTOM | Sign of illness, such as a runny nose or fever |
| STARBOARD | Right side of an aeroplane or vessel when facing the nose or bow (9) |
| HARBOURBRIDGE | Shelter top of nose, or it will look like a Sydney landmark (7,6) |
| CATARRH | An excessive discharge or build-up of mucus in the nose or throat (7) |