| LEAVESBE | Doesn't change a dialect version of "foliage is" (6,2) |
| LEAVE | Most of foliage is to go |
| SITSPAT | Doesn't change a thing |
| MATABELE | A Bantu language sometimes considered a dialect of Zulu. |
| ISOMORPH | It doesn't change form of fresh promo - simply goes around (8) |
| CONSTANT | This doesn't change substance of archdeacon's tantrum |
| YINGLISH | A dialect of English spoken especially by Jewish immigrants to New York (8) |
| MONOTONE | Unemotional voice that doesn't change |
| SYMMETRY | Pleasing arrangement that doesn't change on reflection? (8) |
| PIKELETS | A dialect word for 'crumpets', thinner and freeform in shape (8) |
| FLINDERS | A dialect word for butterflies, fragments, shivers or splinters (8) |
| DROPLEAF | Description of an item of foliage falling in autumn, say, and a table where the sides lower down! (4-4) |
| LAURELED | Honored with a crown of foliage |
| BESMIRCH | Tree bearing final bits of foliage rises from soil |
| SMEUSE | A dialect word, combining the Old French for "secret hiding place" and "smoot", meaning a small hole, for a gap in a fence or hedge for the passing of a rabbit or a hare (6) |
| GREENEST | Lushest (of foliage) |
| LAUREL | Its foliage is a symbol of victory |
| FLUSH | A rapid flight, spring up or start of game birds; a suffusion of crimson colour in the cheeks; a sudden flow of water; a fresh growth of foliage, flowers or fruit; or, a feeling of excitement (5) |
| KALMIA | Genus of evergreen shrubs of North America and Cuba whose foliage is toxic if eaten by certain anima |
| HOLT | Term for a fortress/keep originally, later a dialect word for a grasp or grip; an otter's riverbank couch, den or lair; a refuge; or, from "twig", a copse, orchard, wood or wooded hill (4) |