| DISCHARROW | A type of plough (4,6) |
| ARD | Primitive type of plough used to scratch the top layer of soil (3) |
| ARDROSSAN | In which small South Australian port on Gulf St Vincent did the inventor of the Vixen stump-jump plough open a factory in 1880 for the manufacture of ploughs? (9) |
| SHAREHOLDER | One carrying section of plough is part-owner of company |
| SHARE | Blade of plough; portion |
| STILLLIFE | Artwork of plough surrounded by random flies (5,4) |
| STOCKSTILL | Carries plough like a statue? |
| WORKSLOWLY | Plough through |
| SEANOCASEY | "The Plough and the Stars" dramatist |
| FRITILLARY | 25 plough through Tuckhouse? (10) |
| STANDSTILL | Stop bears with plough (10) |
| TERRAFIRMA | After marriage, take time off to plough dry ground (5,5) |
| ARABLELAND | It's under the plough and ball: are they different? (6,4) |
| SOLE | Underside or bottom of a boot, clubhead, foot, oven or plough; the floor of a ship's cabin; or, the end of the chanter of a set of bagpipes (4) |
| TILLER | A lever attached to a boat's rudder for steering; the stock of a crossbow; a cultivator or plough; or, a sapling (6) |
| BEAM | Section of a plough; part of a roof; or, a horizontal bar for gymnastics (4) |
| ACRE | Originally, the area of land a yoke of oxen could plough in one day |
| ARABLE | From the Latin meaning "to plough", type of farmland suitable for growing crops, sometimes used as the nesting habitat of lapwings, grey partridges and other birds (6) |
| SHUNT | Robot Wars house robot with a rear ramming plough, a front lifting scoop and a titanium-tipped axe |
| HARNESS | An old word for armour collectively; or, an arrangement of straps and reins by which a draught horse is fastened to a cart/plough (7) |