| TEAROSES | Blooms named for their scent |
| ASTERS | Blooms named for their shape |
| STOCKS | Tree trunks; logs; beams; or, blooms named for their thick stout woody stalks supporting gillyflowers (6) |
| POURRI | Pot-__, French term for a mixture of dried plants chosen for their scents (6) |
| CANTERBURYBELLS | Garden blooms named for medieval music makers |
| CABBAGEROSE | Pink bloom named for a vegetable |
| SNAPDRAGON | Spring bloom named for its resemblance to a mythical creature |
| ESTERS | They give many fruits their scent |
| TERRITORY | Wolves use their scent to mark ___ |
| SKUNKS | Animals said to make good pets if their scent glands are removed |
| ROSES | Blooms named the US National Flower by Reagan in the eponymous White House garden |
| FUCHSIAS | Plants with drooping vivid red or purple blooms, named after a German botanist |
| YANKEECANDLE | Their scents include Farmstand Festival and Autumn Dusk |
| BEES | Busy people, competitions for spelling or gatherings for quilting/sewing, all named for their resemblance to industrious sociable buzzing or humming honey-making hymenopterans of the same name (4) |
| TRAY | A thin insert for a layer of chocolates in a box, a toaster's shallow crumb drawer, a metal sheet on which to bake biscuits or a silver salver for drinks, each named for their likeness to a treen boar |
| SAG | Award for film and TV performers, named for their union |
| BULLSEYE | Word for an archery target's central gold, a big round humbug-like peppermint, a cyclone's whirling centre, a lantern, a porthole or a thick lens, each named for their apparent resemblance in some way |
| OTOWN | Boy band named for their Florida city's nickname |
| YUGOS | European cars named for their country of origin |
| OTTOMANS | Middle Easterners named for their first sultan |