| OROIDE | Alloy of copper with zinc or tin used in imitation gold jewellery (6) |
| BRONZE | Alloy of copper and tin, used in sculpture (6) |
| DRAWSNEAR | Unrefined tin used in costly approaches (5,4) |
| BASEMETAL | Copper, lead, zinc or tin, as opposed to gold, silver or platinum |
| GRISAILLE | Technique of grey monochrome painting used in imitation of sculpture |
| OXIDE | Word with zinc or nitrous |
| SCAT | _ singing, improvised jazz singing where the voice is used in imitation of an instrument (4) |
| METAL | Zinc or tin |
| BAZAAR | Persian word for a Middle-Eastern market or souk, typically with stalls selling exotic scents, gold, jewellery, rugs, spices etc; or, in the UK, a sale of miscellany, often for charity (6) |
| ORMOLU | Alloy of copper, zinc and tin used for making ornaments (6) |
| PEWTER | Britannia metal-like alloy of mainly tin, used for candlesticks, goblets, ladles, plates, spoons etc (6) |
| BRASS | Originally, any alloy of copper with tin or zinc, now an alloy of copper and zinc only (5) |
| ZIRCON | Zinc or rocky mineral in crystal form (6) |
| ERSATZ | Made in imitation of a natural or genuine product; artificial (6) |
| KARATS | Gold jewellery units |
| OREIDE | Imitation gold |
| ORRERY | Corrected error by day's end in imitation of the planets (6) |
| CANOPY | A name found in imitation of overhanging covering (6) |
| SHAKUDO | Japanese alloy of copper with a small percentage of gold, typically having a dark blue patina; used in ornamental metalwork (7) |
| OMLAHS | Staffs left in imitation of uprising |