| INFULLSWING | At the height of activity |
| INFULL | At the height of activity (2,4) |
| ALTOCUMULUS | Globular cloud at the height of 2000m to 7000m (11) |
| LEONID | ____ Brezhnev, Soviet leader at the height of the Cold War (6) |
| LESLIENIELSEN | Comic actor who hosted the show in 1989, at the height of his Naked Gun fame |
| EMINENCE | A cardinal, for instance, was at the height of distinction (8) |
| ROSSINI | Italian composer who set new standards for opera before retiring from large-scale composition in his thirties, at the height of his popularity. (7) |
| CLIMAX | At height of activity large number make a mark outside South American capital (6) |
| HIGHSTREETS | Rest after mounting the heights of shopping centres (4,7) |
| RISE | Ascent; the surfacing of a fish to take a fly; the appearance of the Sun or the Moon above the horizon; the height of an arch, incline or step; or, an angry or excited response (4) |
| HAND | Measure of four inches used to determine the height of a horse, typically from the ground to the highest point of the withers (4) |
| SPIDER | Long-legged rest in snooker used to raise the cue above the level of the height of the ball (6) |
| TALL | Descriptive of the height of the installation (4) |
| STATURE | The height of the human body, degree of eminence, social standing, advancement |
| PUNCHLINE | Queue for drinks at the party is the height of a joke (5,4) |
| PITCH | On the piano, you want the height of the note to be right (5) |
| ALTITUDE | Up in the clouds and reach for the sky: that's the height of it. (8) |
| TOR | The height of the story (3) |
| AUGMENT | Increase, in the height of summer, number of people standing in for us |
| QUEENVICTORIA | UK ruler and symbolic figure throughout the height of the Industrial Revolution (5,8) |