| SCORPIO | A water |
| LIE | Postion of the golf ball when it comes to rest - a good one would be on the fairway, a bad one in the rough or in a bunker and an impossible one up a tree or in a water hazard |
| CHUTE | Short word for a canopy deployed during a jump from an aircraft; a water slide; or, a toboggan run (5) |
| IRON | Appliance with a water reservoir for bursts of steam, a soleplate and a thermostat (4) |
| CANTEEN | Box for cutlery; cafeteria within a workplace; or, a water bottle for a soldier or camper (7) |
| GENRE | Word denoting a painting depicting scenes from everyday life, such as de Hooch's A Boy Bringing Bread or Vermeer's Young Woman with a Water Pitcher (5) |
| KETTLE | Flock of migrating raptors; a water-boiler; or, an enclosed area formed by a police cordon in order to contain a group of protesters (6) |
| AMMO | The water for a water gun |
| BILLABONG | Charge for a water pipe by branch of a river in Australia (9) |
| AQUIFER | Ref sent back almost a quid before getting a water supplier (7) |
| LOON | American name for a water-bird also known as a diver (4) |
| PONDERED | Thought to be a water reed of a new kind (8) |
| TERRAPIN | A reprint, perhaps, of a water tortoise (8) |
| SWAN | A dam without a water bird (4) |
| CLAMBAKE | Elvis is the son of a millionaire who switches places with a water-skiing instructor in this 1967 movie |
| HYDRANT | Connection used to attach a hose to a water main |
| GALLINULE | A Nile gull turning out to be a water hen |
| THEFOURSEAS | Unfinished Vivaldi work a.k.a. "Water Music for the Mathematically Challenged"? |
| KELPIE | In Scottish folklore, a water spirit in the form of a horse that drowned its riders (6) |
| MAIDENVOYAGE | For younger horses, a trip that usually contains a water feature - first time out one might crack open the champagne (6,6) |