| OSSUARY | Container or room for bones of the dead (7) |
| STOWAGE | Charge - or room - for storing goods (7) |
| HOLDERS | Bags, boxes, cases, racks or other containers; or, owners/possessors of championships, keys, small farms, trophies or world records, e.g. (7) |
| UTENSIL | A tool, container or other article for household use (7) |
| CHARNEL | Camouflaged hole near such a repository for bones (7,5) |
| CARPALS | Friends pursuing transport for bones (7) |
| MYELOMA | Most of the lemon may be treated for bone marrow disease |
| FISHING | Searching for bone in the fruit (7) |
| HOLDALL | Capacious container (or ancient outbuilding?) (7) |
| APRICOT | Endless staple food put in a container - or fruit (7) |
| CALCIUM | Mineral good for bones and teeth |
| SHINDIG | Do excavating for bones? |
| CADDIES | Tea containers or golfers' aides |
| SPLINTS | Immobilizers for bone fractures |
| DOJO | Japanese word, meaning "place of the way", for a hall or room for the practice of martial arts (4) |
| OSSUARIES | The bones of the dead are kept in them (9) |
| OLGA | "Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead" author Tokarczuk |
| COOKHOUSE | A building or room for the preparation of meals (4-5) |
| CARTON | A white disc at the centre of the bull's-eye of a target; a shot that hits it; a pasteboard container; or, a waxed box for juice, milk, soup and the like (6) |
| REC | Hall or room, for short |