| STYLOPODIUM | Disc-shaped or conical swelling at the base of the style in umbelliferous plants (11) |
| HELIX | Curve on a cylindrical or conical surface that would become a straight line if the surface was unrolled into a plane (5) |
| STYE | Small inflamed swelling at the edge of the eyelid |
| GUSTO | Word, from "taste", for keen relish, liking, vigour or zest; or, the style in which a work of art is executed (5) |
| STY | Swelling at the edge of an eyelid |
| VERBOSE | Denoting the style in which one might consider this clue to be written |
| METHANE | Swamp gas put the style in some hair (7) |
| STIGMA | In botany, the terminal part of the ovary, at the end of the style |
| GEORGIAN | Description of the style of architecture which developed during the reigns of the four Hanoverian kings of Great Britain (8) |
| HARPSEAL | A type of seal, also called a saddleback, it possesses a black harp-shaped or saddle-shaped marking on its back. They are found on or near ice floes from the Kara Sea of Russia west to the Gulf of St. |
| BRECHTIAN | Suggestive of the style of the playwright who wrote The Caucasian Chalk Circle (9) |
| CAPSICUM | Genus of plants whose mild or pungent seeds are enclosed in a pod-shaped or bell-shaped fruit |
| GREENERYYALLERY | Of the style of the 19th-century Aesthetic Movement (8-7) |
| BRICK | Word, thought to have been introduced by Flemish workmen, for a baked, fired or sun-dried building block of clay; a loaf of bread; a toy wooden block thus shaped; or, a red or deep terracotta colour ( |
| VAIR | In heraldry, fur represented in shield-shaped or bell-shaped figures (4) |
| WEDGES | Shoes such as espadrilles with block heels; cuneiform characters; door chocks or pieces of cheese thus shaped; or, skeins of geese (6) |
| LOOPIER | Most of the style one associates with Marina is more eccentric (7) |
| PLATELET | Small, disc-shaped cell involved in the clotting of blood (8) |
| LOOKOUT | Beware of the style on all sides today (7) |
| OGEE | Line or moulding with an S-shaped, or serpentine, cross-section, also known as a talon or cyma reversa (4) |