| TRIPE | As food, the stomach lining of a cow or other ruminant |
| RUT | Word, from the Latin for "roar" in reference to the clamour of stags when challenging rivals, for the annual mating season of said animals and other ruminant mammalians (3) |
| RUMINANT | Camel, cow or other cud-chewer; or, a contemplative person, given to figuratively chewing things over (8) |
| ALIMENT | As food, the little creature consumes fruit (7) |
| MILKROUND | Dairyman/woman's daily journey on their float, to deliver the bottled lactation of a cow or even a goat (4,5) |
| HOOF | Foot of a cow or horse, eg |
| METHANE | Gas emitted by cows and other ruminants (7) |
| GASTRO | Inflammation of the stomach lining and intestine, in short (6) |
| JAMB | The side post or lining of a doorway, window or fireplace (4) |
| ULCER | Problem of the stomach lining |
| GASTRITIS | Inflammation of the stomach lining |
| BOVINE | A cow or a buffalo is made up of six bone pieces |
| EIEIO | What might come after a cow or a sheep? |
| OVINE | Headless, like a cow or a sheep (5) |
| IDIOM | "Have a cow" or "smell a rat," e.g. |
| UNGULATE | Typically hoofed mammal, such as a cow or horse |
| FETTLER | One who repairs the lining of a furnace (7) |
| CEILING | What is the overhead interior lining of a room (7) |
| MEMBRANE | Lining of a tissue or cell (8) |
| SHUDDERY | Be quiet like a cow - or prone to trembling (8) |