| ENTRY | Doorway providing access to a building; or, an item recorded in a diary, dictionary or encyclopedia (5) |
| FLAN | From Latin for "flat", a diagram on a flat surface of a 3-D object such as a building; or, an aim (4) |
| REFERENCEBOOK | Dictionary or encyclopedia, eg (9,4) |
| LEXICON | Dictionary or encyclopedia, like the 10th-century Suda (7) |
| PAGE | Varlet or apprentice knight ranking next below a squire; or, one or both sides of a leaf of paper in a book, diary, dictionary or newspaper (4) |
| LEVEL | A stage in a video game; a floor of a multistorey building; or, an instrument for testing flatness (5) |
| ANNEXE | Subsidiary building or an addition to a building (6) |
| ENGAGEMENTS | Betrothals recorded in a diary? (11) |
| YEAR | Grade items recorded in quarterly earnings (4) |
| WAYLEAVE | Access to property granted by a landowner for payment, for example to allow a contractor access to a building site |
| MAT | A coaster or a small rug; a surface on which to practice yoga, judo or gymnastics; or, an item placed under a non-optical computer mouse (3) |
| CUP | A mortarboard; a cone historically placed on the head of a "dunce" as a mark of disgrace; or, an item awarded to a selectee of a national sports team, hence the player chosen (3) |
| TOOLBAR | A strip of icons on a computer display providing access to certain functions (7) |
| BULB | From the Greek for "onion", a globular stem of a plant such as the aforesaid or the daffodil; or, an item in this shape, such as the rubber part of a pipette or bicycle horn (4) |
| CATHOLICON | From "universal", a word for a cure-all, elixir or panacea; or, a comprehensive work, such as an encyclopaedic dictionary or the early Summa Grammaticalis (10) |
| ARTICLES | Clauses or paragraphs in legal documents; or, stories, features or entries in newspapers, magazines or encyclopedias (8) |
| DOORWAY | Point of access to a building or room (7) |
| CYBERCAFE | Shop/bar providing access to the internet and computers for a fee (9) |
| BELL | Inventor of the first practical telephone; or, an item attached to a pull to summon staff in a large Victorian household for example (4) |
| GLOSS | Lustre; paint or cosmetic with a shiny finish; or, short word for a mini dictionary or lexicon of terms peculiar to field of knowledge (5) |