| UMBRAGE | Displeasure, or archaically, a shadow |
| KICK | A back-heel of a ball, boot of a bucket or other strike with a foot; a gun's recoil; or, archaically, the fashion (4) |
| RECEIPTS | A word for monies taken; written acknowledgements of these; or, archaically, cookery formulae (8) |
| SHARD | Archaically, a boundary water; dialectically, a gap; vernacularly, a broken piece, crock or scrap of pottery; or, zoologically, from a misunderstanding of Shakespeare, a beetle's elytron or wing case |
| HISS | A cry or noise made to express displeasure or contempt (4) |
| FILLY | Word, related to "foal", for a colt's young mare counterpart; thus, rather archaically, a lively or spirited girl (5) |
| DRINKER | Archaically, a winebibber was a habitual what? (7) |
| ABYSM | Archaically, a bottomless pit |
| BOOS | Noises made to show displeasure or contempt (4) |
| ANEIGHTDAYS | Archaically, a week |
| KIPPAGE | (Scottish) State of displeasure or anger (7) |
| POUTS | Thrusts out the lips, especially in displeasure or sullenness. (5) |
| RESENT | To show displeasure or indignation, is to do what (6) |
| UMBRA | Darkest part of a shadow or a sunspot; a ghost; or, an uninvited guest who comes with an invitee (5) |
| AGENT | An intermediary or go-between; any natural power or force acting on matter; or, a shadow, spook or spy (5) |
| CAST | Word before "a shadow" or "a spell" |
| BACKBENCHER | Member of Parliament who is neither a minister or a shadow minister (11) |
| GNOMON | From "to know", the indicator or pin of a sundial that casts a shadow so that one knows the time (6) |
| ANTHELION | A luminous halo round a shadow projected by the sun onto a cloud |
| FORCERTAIN | Without a shadow of a doubt |