| SOAPDISH | Container for a bar of Dial: 2 wds. |
| CROW | Short word for a bar of iron with a beak-like end; the triumphant caw of a cockerel; the joyful cry of a baby or of a boastful person; or, a small raven-like bird with a raucous call (4) |
| INGOT | Gin to be exchanged for a bar of gold (5) |
| AM | FM'S counterpart on the radio dial (2) |
| ABC | Phone dial's 2 |
| BAND | A bar of colour; a belt; a binding for banknotes or braids; a body of brass instrumentalists, brothers, brumbies or burglars; or, a bond (4) |
| PERCH | A measure of length also called a pole or a rod, thus a word for a bar, branch or stick upon which a bird alights, rests or roosts (5) |
| MEASURE | Cup, jug or spoon for quantifying cookery ingredients by volume; a graduated strip of tape or flexible metal for ascertaining length or width; a stately dance; or, a bar of music (7) |
| DUALIPA | Music artist formed by an anagram of "dial up" + A: 2 wds. |
| STOCKINGFILLER | One of a series of gifts placed in a sock at Christmas such as a bar of soap, bath cube, clementine, chocolate coin, monogrammed handkerchief ... (8,6) |
| PERFECT | 1998 Michael (M.) Douglas remake of Dial M for Murder, A _______ Murder. |
| INKLES | Gets a hint of: Dial. |
| HARDTOHOLD | It's difficult to get stolen gear back - anything antique to a bar of soap, for instance (4,2,4) |
| CINNABAR | Carbon bar and a bar of red mineral (8) |
| OVAL | Shape of a bar of Dove soap |
| SCAMEL | Norfolk dialect, from the long-debated word for a gull, limpet, sea mew or wader in Shakespeare's The Tempest, for a bar-tailed godwit (6) |
| BEERPARLOUR | Canadian name for a bar in a hotel or tavern |
| UHF | 1989 Weird Al Yankovic movie whose title is a type of dial on 1960s TVs |
| XII | Top-of-dial numeral |
| TIMBRE | Speaking clock once developed without start of dial tone |