| TITBIT | Dainty morsel, delicacy (6) |
| TIDBIT | Orderly cut and chewed dainty morsel (6) |
| ELFIN | Dainty morsel of mackerel, finely sliced (5) |
| DELICACY | Fineness of structure or texture; fragile or graceful beauty; a dainty morsel or special culinary luxury; tact; or, the need for said propriety (8) |
| ARMAND | From French for "delicacy, treat", name for an almond-based dainty or cake flavoured with fruit; a savoury puff or sausage roll of France; or, the epicure who enjoys such delices (6) |
| PETITE | Dainty Italian beset by boy (6) |
| SPRITE | Grudge-bearing queen is a dainty creature (6) |
| MIGNON | Dainty (from French) (6) |
| ECLAIR | Dainty city hideaway (6) |
| BANDIT | Exclude odd, 'dainty' tsotsi (6) |
| CANAPE | A dainty hors d'oeuvre (6) |
| TWEEDS | Trousers are dainty on detective sergeant (6) |
| MORSEL | Dainty piece of food (6) |
| NIBBLE | Dainty bite (6) |
| MINCED | Affected a dainty walk to ground (6) |
| TWEEDY | Precious, extremely dainty - but ready for the outdoors? (6) |
| MARROW | F1 'Tiger Cross', 'Table Dainty' and 'Long Green Bush 3 - Smallpak' are all varieties of this vegetable! (6) |
| ARTTSY | From the Old English for "trick", a word with early meanings including clever, crafty, cunning, later attractive, chocolate-box, dainty, delicately beautiful, fine or twee (6) |
| MINUET | Stately court dance in triple time fashionable in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries; from French, 'dainty, small' (6) |
| PINNER | A dainty apron; a maker of tacks for temporarily fastening cloth; either of a pair of lappets of a lady's white linen indoor cap; or, the cloth hat itself (6) |