| FALLS | Cascades of water; or, flocks of woodcock (5) |
| FALL | Cascade of water; six ells; a flock of woodcock; or, a group of lambs (4) |
| HAIL | Descent or cascade of water or snow; a decrease in size or rate; or, another word for autumn (4) |
| TORRENTS | Cascades of water burst through hills |
| WINGS | Badge of a qualified pilot; or, flocks of plovers or groups of dragons (5) |
| COVEY | A brood, hatch or flock of grouse, partridges, quail or other game birds; or, a small party or set of people (5) |
| WISPS | Hand-twisted bundles of hay or straw for grooming horses; or, flocks of snipe (5) |
| PLUMP | Word meaning well-rounded or chubby; or, dialect for a cluster, knot or flock of geese, spearmen or trees (5) |
| DROVE | Herd or flock of animals moving together (5) |
| ANGEL | - Falls; the highest, uninterrupted cascade of water in the world (5) |
| FORCE | Energy produced by cascade of water |
| TRAIN | Flowing eye-spotted feathers of a peacock; or, a cascade of satin or silk at the back of a bridal gown (5) |
| SNIPE | Any of around 26 species of wading bird of the sandpiper family (Scolopacidae) resembling the woodcock, especially the common Gallinago gallinago (5) |
| CAMEL | Ungulate animal whose collective noun is caravan or flock (5) |
| SLIGO | Irish county location of Temple House woodcock shoot (5) |
| PECUS | A herd or flock: grex, armentum |
| TOMMY | Phar Lap's strapper, ... Woodcock (5) |
| PETER | ______ Woodcock (Ontario serial Killer) |
| JABOT | Cascade of ruffles |
| WISP | A flight or flock of snipe; a bundle of hay or straw for shining a horse's coat; or, a little broom (4) |