| BUNGALOW | A one-storied house whose name is of AngloIndian origin (8) |
| MULLIGATAWNY | Curry-flavoured soup of AngloIndian origin (12) |
| MARIMBA | Instrument whose name is of Bantu origin |
| RIAD | Traditional Moroccan house whose name, from "garden", directly reflects its central and defining feature of an interior "paradise" (4) |
| LONDONBROIL | Marinated beef dish which, despite its name, is of American origin |
| SPAREROOM | Extra space in a house whose first word is a bowling outcome worse than a strike: 2 wds. |
| HOTTOGO | Phrase meaning "ready to be eaten at home" whose first word is the opposite of "cold" and whose last word is the opposite of "stop": 3 wds. |
| ICON | Production house whose logo is a close crop from a religious painting (4) |
| TUDOR | House whose symbol is a red-and-white rose |
| VERSACE | Italian fashion house whose logo is the head of Medusa |
| GUCCI | Luxury fashion house whose taglines included "Quality is remembered long after price is forgotten" (5) |
| LUOUIJASMANSION | *Game set in a haunted house whose residents send you messages about your mustachioed brother, one l |
| RAVENCLAW | Hogwarts house whose emblem is, surprisingly, an eagle |
| CHANEL | Fashion house whose logo is two interlocking C's |
| COTTAGE | Small, rural, single-storied house (7) |
| JEKYLL | Author of Kitchen Essays and the miniature cookery book in Queen Mary's Dolls' House whose sister-in-law designed gardens in collaboration with Edwin Lutyens (6) |
| YORK | English royal house whose founder, Edmund of Langley, adopted the white rose as its emblem (4) |
| CHATSWORTH | Derbyshire Dales' grand art-laden home, whose grounds boast Joseph Paxton's gravity-fed "Emperor Fountain" watery treat, capable of achieving heights of up to 300 feet (10) |
| SCHWAB | Brokerage house whose ads are animated by Flat Black Films |
| DKNY | Fashion house whose initials come from its founder and the city it's headquartered in |