| PANHANDLE | Beg for a thin slice of the American state (9) |
| WAFER | A few turn right for a thin slice of silicon (5) |
| CRISP | Credit is a penny for a thin slice of potato (5) |
| ESCALOPE | From cutlet to schnitzel - a culinary word for a thin slice of breaded fried tenderised meat, echoing in name and form an Old French "shell" (8) |
| OHIO | One of the American states bordering on Lake Erie |
| RHODEISLAND | Smallest of the American states (5,6) |
| IDAHO | One of the American States (5) |
| PEPPERONI | A pork and beef sausage (or a thin slice of this sausage) (9) |
| SCHNITZEL | German word for 'cutlet', used to describe a thin slice of deep-fried breaded veal (9) |
| PIGSLIVER | Eat greedily a thin slice of meat (4,5) |
| GREYHOUND | Enough dry ground for a thin runner (9) |
| RICEPAPER | Fixed a price for a thin delicate material used by bakers (4,5) |
| SLIVER | Word for a thin bit, whether a chip of petit four, flake of almond, slice of cake, wafer of cheese, shred of hope or a shard of light under one's door (6) |
| ONEFOURTH | Generous slice of the pie |
| PEPERONI | A pork and beef sausage (or a thin slice of this sausage) (8) |
| MEISSNEREFFECT | The phenomenon in which magnetic flux is excluded from a substance when it is in a superconducting state, except for a thin layer at the surface |
| RASHER | A thin slice of bacon or ham (6) |
| LATTICE | From an old word for a thin slat of wood, a decorative arrangement of criss-crossed strips forming an espalier, fretwork, grating, grille, mesh, piecrust or trellis; or, a window with diamond-shaped p |
| ENTREAT | Beg for a bunfight at the end of the garden |
| COULIS | French word for a thin puree of raspberries or other soft fruit as a sauce for cheesecake, ice cream, mousse or other pudding (6) |