| DENOMINATION | Class or group (12) |
| LEAGUE | An old distance of three miles or an hour's walk; an alliance of clubs or sports teams; or, a class or group (6) |
| TYPE | Class or group of a particular class (4) |
| CLERISY | Word, based on "heritage", for the intelligentsia or literati as a class or group, as opposed to the laity (7) |
| GENERIC | Applicable to a whole class or group (7) |
| REPRESENTATIVE | Typical (of a class or group) |
| CATEGORY | Class or group (8) |
| GENUS | Class or group of antelopes out East (5) |
| TYPIC | Relating to a class or group (5) |
| SLOANERANGER | Young upper-class or middle-class person prevalent in 1970s and 1980s with homes in the country and in London (6,6) |
| VALETUDINARY | Man serving upper class or avoiding common, sickly person |
| BENZ | C-Class, E-Class, or S-Class, casually |
| RANGER | see 17dn, The term coined by Peter York in 1975 for a young upper-class or upper-middle-class person living in Chelsea or Kensington |
| AGGREGATE | Form or group into a class or cluster (9) |
| SLOANE | and 28dn, The term coined by Peter York in 1975 for a young upper-class or upper-middle-class person living in Chelsea or Kensington |
| SPHERE | A globe; a literary word for the night sky perceived as a vaulted roof; or, a class or stratum of society (6) |
| MODEL | An exemplar; a kind of diorama representing an object or a proposed structure; an artist's sitter in a life class; or, a sculptor's maquette (5) |
| FORM | Body shape; fitness; a long bench; a school class; or, a questionnaire or other schedule to be filled in (4) |
| ESTATE | Word for condition, social class or standing originally, later, from the idea of the position of prosperity, one's assets, land or total possessions (6) |
| RULER | One might be used in math class or studied in history class |