| CARAT | A unit of weight for precious stones and pearls (5) |
| CARATS | Units of weight for precious stones and pearls (6) |
| POINT | Unit of weight for precious stones equal to 2 milligrams, or one hundredth of a carat (5) |
| TROY | System of weights for precious stones and metals (4) |
| TONNE | A unit of mass or a unit of weight (5) |
| WATER | First -; finest quality of the clarity and lustre of diamonds and pearls (5) |
| OUNCE | In the past, pound essentially was a unit of weight (5) |
| ARTAL | Cunning needed to have a pound as a unit of weight |
| POUND | This is a unit of weight (5) |
| STONE | A unit of weight equal to 14 pounds (5) |
| OPALS | Sailor going round China for precious stones (5) |
| EARLS | "Doesn't like crap games with barons and ...; Won't go to Harlem in ermine and pearls; Won't dish the dirt with the rest of those girls; That's why the lady is a tramp" |
| AGATE | Precious stone and silver bolted down? |
| BEZEL | Setting for precious stones |
| TROYPOUND | Old measure of weight for precious jewels and metals - Tudor pony (anag) (4,5) |
| TROYOUNCE | Unit of weight for precious metals (4,5) |
| TON | A unit of weight equal to 2,240 lbs avoirdupois; an informal word for 100mph, £100 or a score of 100; or, with definite article, fashionable society during the Regency era (3) |
| GEMS | Minerals for decoration such as precious diamonds, semi-precious opals and topazes or the organic ambers, corals, jets and pearls (4) |
| JEWELS | Personal ornaments of precious stones and metals |
| JEWELLER | Seller of precious stones and metals |