| SWEETPEAS | Candy, legumes or flowers? (5,4) |
| INBED | Like lovers or flowers? (2,3) |
| SPRIG | What is an ornamental design resembling a spray of leaves or flowers? (5) |
| AROSE | Stood up or flower? |
| STILLLIFE | A painting or drawing of inanimate objects, such as fruit or flowers (5,4) |
| ALLOTMENT | In Britain, a small area of rented land used for growing vegetables or flowers (9) |
| EUPHRATES | Cargo to slip behind a tree, say, or flower (9) |
| PEANUTS | Legumes or kernels often salted or dry-roasted as snacks; or, a comic strip by Charles M. Schulz (7) |
| DAL | From Sanskrit for "to split", dried beans, lentils and other pulses in Indian cookery; a curry or puree of said legumes; or, a yellow-flowered tropical herb, also called pigeon pea (3) |
| JARDINIERE | Word, from the French for "female gardener", for a decorative flower box or plant stand; a garnish of mixed seasonal legumes; or, a style of drapery with a floral pattern and crescent-shaped ruffled h |
| SPLITPEAS | Smoky soup legumes, or a phonetic and visual hint to interpreting two letters in 7-, 10- and 21-Down |
| BANANA | Unmanageable without legume or fruit (6) |
| PEA | Little legume or sweet flower (3) |
| SWEETPEA | Flower sounds like a lovely legume or endearment (5,3) |
| POTHERB | Any of various plants whose leaves or stems or flowers are cooked and used for food or seasoning (3, |
| ALLEYS | Lanes for bowling or skittles; or, tree- or flower-lined walks or paths through gardens and shrubberies (6) |
| BOUQUETIERES | French word, rooted in "bushes, clumps of trees" and blossoming or stemming from "posies, corsages", for female florists, flower girls or flower sellers; or, garnishing garlands or jardinieres of fres |
| TISANES | Infusions of dried or fresh leaves or flowers (7) |
| TISANE | An infusion of dried or fresh leaves or flowers (6) |
| TOILE | - de Jouy; repetitive pattern of a rural French scene or flowers on cream or off-white fabric/wallpa |