| REEDY | Describing a voice that is high or thin in tone (5) |
| OROTUND | Like a voice that is full and rich |
| LANK | Word for drooping, flaccid, limp, long or thin in the UK, but plentiful, numerous or a lot in South Africa (4) |
| ACTIVE | Voice that is the opposite of passive in grammar (6) |
| ALTO | Voice that is breaking a lot (4) |
| TINNY | A term meaning "stannic", hence flimsy, jangly, metallic-sounding, poor-quality or thin; or, in Australia, an informal word for "lucky", a can of beer or a small aluminium fishing boat (5) |
| LORAX | Seuss character who "spoke with a voice that was sharpish and bossy" |
| DURUM | Type of wheat that is high in gluten (5) |
| ADIEU | Farewell to commercial that is high class (5) |
| REBAB | Eighth-century stringed instrument with a tone similar to the human voice that accompanied poets in early Khaleeji music, also called rababa (5) |
| GRUEL | A drink or thin porridge, made by boiling oatmeal in water or milk (5) |
| FUGUE | Musical composition for a given number of parts or voices that enter successively in imitation of each other (5) |
| NASAL | Astronauts left with voice that sounds congested (5) |
| TWANG | The sort of voice that would pluck the heartstrings? (5) |
| CORDS | Trousers or breeches whose name refers to the velvety ribbed cloth from which they are cut; the ribs on said fabric/trews; thick strings or thin ropes; measure of cut wood; or, flexes (5) |
| ALTOS | Voices that are high for men and low for women |
| TIGHT | ___ lie (lie on bare ground or thin grass) |
| EBONY | First of enemies, thin, in dark wood (5) |
| CREPE | Crinkled paper or thin pancake |
| SPARE | Meager or thin |