| COLLAPSE | A sudden or complete breakdown (8) |
| SURPRISE | A sudden or unexpected event or gift (8) |
| UPHEAVAL | A sudden or violent change or disruption to something (8) |
| NOSEDIVE | Sudden or steep plunge or drop (8) |
| PANORAMA | A wide or complete view (8) |
| ROTATION | An orbit or complete axial turn; or, the growing of crops in succession (8) |
| CORONERS | Legal officials who hold inquests into sudden or unexplained deaths (8) |
| EXAMINER | Medical ____, one who investigates sudden or unusual deaths in the U.S. (8) |
| ALOPECIA | Partial or complete absence of hair on the body (8) |
| SLUMP | A sudden or marked decline or failure (5) |
| CULPEPER | Nicholas -; apothecary noted for his 1652-53 book The English Physician, or Complete Herbal (8) |
| BLACKOUT | Faint, or complete dark |
| INQUEST | Inquiry by a coroner's court into the cause of a sudden or unexplained death (7) |
| ALLOF | Words with "a sudden" or "the above" |
| SHARPLY | In a sudden or surprising manner |
| CRASH | Word for a car collision; economic collapse; a complete breakdown of a computer; or, a coarse linen (5) |
| ABRUPT | Word meaning sudden or unexpected; brusque or curt in manner or speech; or, precipitous (6) |
| STUDY | A home office or den in which to swot, compose, write letters, send emails or complete prep; an exercise in art; or, an etude in music (5) |
| IMPAIRMENT | A partial or complete loss of function of a body part or organ (10) |
| DASH | Be it a hyphen, pen stroke, rush, soupcon, splash, sprint or violent blow, it is characterised by being small, sudden or the very antithesis of slow (4) |