|  | BOMBASINE | A twilled fabric of worsted and silk or cotton, especially a black kind for mourning clothes (9) | 
|  | BARATHEA | A soft fabric of worsted or of worsted and silk, etc (8) | 
|  | BOMBAZINE | Material formerly used for mourning clothes (9) | 
|  | SURAH | Rush all over the place to secure a twilled fabric of silk (5) | 
|  | PLAGUE | Harass badger to black kind of death (6) | 
|  | PARAMATTA | A fabric like merino made of worsted and cotton (9) | 
|  | SERGE | The worker leaves the army NCO a twilled fabric (5) | 
|  | PARRAMATTA | Fabric with a weft of worsted and a warp of cotton or silk (10) | 
|  | GEORGETTE | Fine silk or cotton crepe fabric similar to chiffon, named after a 19th-century Parisian dressmaker (9) | 
|  | CHEONGSAM | Close-fitting Chinese dress of silk or cotton | 
|  | TITFORTAT | Retaliation in kind for flier favouring shoddy stuff (3,3,3) | 
|  | SKEIN | Loosely-tied coil of worsted yarn or wool; or, a flock of wild geese or swans flying in a V-shaped formation (5) | 
|  | FOULARD | Lightweight plain-weave or twill-weave silk or cotton fabric, usually with a printed design (7) | 
|  | PLAID | A twilled cloth or fabric with a chequered or tartan pattern (5) | 
|  | HAND | Part of The Leviathan debunked by four of a kind, for one (4) | 
|  | TAPE | A strip of some kind for marking a finish line, measuring, sticking etc (4) | 
|  | PANTHER | Another name for a leopard, especially a black one | 
|  | JERSEY | Pullover or sweater that derives its name from the largest of the Channel Islands, where the knitting of worsted articles was a staple industry (6) | 
|  | FUSTIAN | A class of twilled fabric such as corduroy, moleskin or velveteen; grandiloquence or pomposity; or, an old negus-like drink with egg yolks (7) | 
|  | ORGANZA | Thin still fabric of silk or cotton (7) |