| EGLANTINE | Another name for sweetbrier (9) |
| WILDROSE | General name for a burnet in the buff, eglantine or sweetbrier in the rough, a dog flower in the hedgerow or other such uncultivated rambler or scrambler left naturally to grow (4,4) |
| ROSE | Flower such as the apple-scented sweetbrier or any other wild variety whose berry-like hips were collected during the Second World War as a source of vitamin C for children (4) |
| ROSACE | Word for something such as a circular aperture, knot of ribbons, oeil-de-boeuf, marigold/wheel window or ornament resembling an eglantine, sweetbrier or related flower (6) |
| ROSY | Word, pertaining to an often pink or red sweetbrier, for blooming, blushing, bright, cheerful, eglantine-covered, fresh, glowing or hopeful; or, wine (4) |
| EGGPLANT | Fruit of sweetbrier mostly impressing doctor |
| WEBER | Sociologist who tires out Sweetbrier (5) |
| BEDEGUAR | A soft spongy gall found on the branches of sweetbrier and other roses (8) |
| HEDGEROW | Botanical border forming part of the landscape of the countryside, rich in honeysuckle, dog roses and apple-scented sweetbrier in June (8) |
| ROSARIAN | Word for a fancier or cultivator of Bourbons, damasks, eglantines, floribundas, noisettes, sweetbriers or other such fragrant blooms (8) |
| EGLANTINES | Neil gets an alternative to sweetbriers (10) |
| BRIE | Sweetbriers yield edible stuff (4) |
| PSEUDONYM | Another name for dopy men, US style (9) |
| LANGOUSTE | Another name for the spiny lobster (9) |
| QUICKLIME | Another name for calcium oxide (9) |
| UMBILICUS | Another name for the navel (9) |
| ALBATROSS | Another name for "The Shot" |
| ASIAMINOR | Another name for Anatolia |
| ERNIEFORD | Another name for Tennessee |
| MUSKMELON | Another name for cantaloupe |