| FRIDAKAHLO | Artist's air had folk all of a tizzy |
| ADO | Bit of a tizzy |
| ESTATE | A property consisting of an extensive area of land usually with a large house / all of a person's assets and liabilities, especially after death |
| SNICKER | Sound of a horse ... requiring almost all of a chocolate bar? (7) |
| SONATA | Young man joins a group of reservists - it's all of a piece |
| MATERIAL | Textile such as tweed or linen; notes, facts and ideas upon which a book is based; or, all of a player's pieces/pawns on a chessboard (8) |
| FLAGELLATION | All of a tingle, perhaps, from such a beating (12) |
| LETHAL | All of a doodah holding the runaway: a potential killer |
| SFORZATO | Order of tzar so emphatic, all of a sudden |
| ESSENCE | The be-all and end-all of a German city church (7) |
| OUT | ___ of the blue (all of a sudden) |
| BRIDGE | A game bird, for example, all of a flutter |
| ACAPELLA | Voice only, a rendering, all of a pace (1,7) |
| BIRDS | Are they all of a flutter, perhaps, at a hen party? (5) |
| SHAKY | A king, in retiring, all of a quiver (5) |
| ENCARTA | All of a sudden car takes part of dictionary (7) |
| ATONEFELLSWOOP | Out of Sellotape now, all of a sudden (2,3,4,5) |
| SUDDEN | All of a ___ (Coming out of the blue) (6) |
| PANIC | Get into a flap all of a sudden |
| ATASTROKE | With a little clothing, run well all of a sudden (2,1,6) |