| LONICERA | Also known as woodbine and honeysuckle (8) |
| HONEYSUCKLE | Lonicera periclymenum, also known as woodbine, is the common European form of this plant (11) |
| OBOE | Winds out woodbines and produces an instrument (4) |
| DORMOUSE | From the Anglo-Norman for "sleepy one", a somnolent squirrel-like rodent nesting in woven bark and honeysuckle and feeding on berries, nuts and the blossoms of hawthorn, oak, sycamore and willow (8) |
| CREEPERS | Wisteria and honeysuckle |
| NICOTINE | Drug obtained from a Woodbine (8) |
| WOODBINE | Also known as honeysuckle and lonicera (8) |
| REWAREWA | Tree also known as NZ honeysuckle (8) |
| FATS | and 46dn, American jazz pianist whose best-known compositions include Ain't Misbehavin' and Honeysuckle Rose |
| WALLER | see 32dn, American jazz pianist whose best-known compositions include Ain't Misbehavin' and Honeysuckle Rose |
| SCABIOUS | Plant in the honeysuckle family, also called pincushion flower (8) |
| MANDARIN | A named orange/yellow honeysuckle - as spoken by many Chinese (8) |
| RIDINGHIGH | Happy to say, coming on Cheltenham,, how Rachael and Honeysuckle are! (6,4) |
| CREEPER | A bird that runs or spirals up and down tree trunks; a daisy-cutter in cricket; or, a vine such as the clematis, periwinkle or woodbine |
| VIRGINIACREEPER | Woodbine woman is a stealthy mover (8,7) |
| SCABIOSA | A nectar-rich genus of the honeysuckle family, also called pincushion flowers (8) |
| HEDGEROW | Botanical border forming part of the landscape of the countryside, rich in honeysuckle, dog roses and apple-scented sweetbrier in June (8) |
| AMBRIDGE | Fictional agricultural village in Borsetshire, setting of locales including Arkwright Hall, Grey Gables, Home Farm, Honeysuckle Cottage, St Stephen's Church and The Bull (8) |
| BINDWEED | The plant "inextricably entwined" and in love with the honeysuckle in a Flanders and Swann song |
| SMOKE | "Ghost of a fire" manifesting as a cloud of carbon particles suspended in the air; grey tinged with blue; a woodbine or other smouldering burn; or, anything that fogs or obscures (5) |