| PRIMULAS | Eg, Cowslips |
| PRIMULA | Plant of a genus that includes cowslips, polyanthuses and Benjamin Disraeli's favourite flower (7) |
| WILDFLOWERS | Plants growing naturally and forming an intrinsic part of the ecosystem of woodlands, meadows and country lanes such as bluebells, cowslips, ramsons, wood anemones or violets (4,7) |
| CYCLAMEN | With rosy-pink flowers from August to September, a tuberous perennial related to primroses, cowslips and the scarlet pimpernel (8) |
| INFIELD | Where to find cowslips, cows and slips (7) |
| PRIMROSES | Cited in works by Shakespeare, Coleridge and Wordsworth, pale yellow blooms related to cowslips, polyanthus and auricula; floral symbols of Devon (9) |
| PRIMROSE | Related to cowslips and oxlips, one of the floral symbols of February with violet, often blooming in the countryside around Mothering Sunday (8) |
| PEARL | 'I must go seek some dew-drops here,/And hang a ___ in every cowslip's ear' (Shakespeare A Midsummer Night's Dream act 2, sc. 1) (5) |
| ILIE | "In a cowslip's bell ___": "The Tempest" |
| BLOOMER | Slip in cowslip, perhaps? (7) |
| OXLIP | Primrose-cowslip hybrid |
| YELLOW | Colour of a cowslip (6) |
| PAGLE | Cowslip leaf found around lake |
| ERST | "The even mead, that __ brought sweetly forth / The freckled cowslip": "Henry V" |
| WORT | Hypericum is St John's-___, whilst the cowslip is also known as St Peter's-___! (4) |
| WILD | - flower; uncultivated plant such as the bluebell, cowslip, daisy or dog violet (4) |
| BEARSEAR | Another name for auricula, a flower in the family that includes primrose, cowslip, oxlip and cyclamen (5,3) |
| CLIP | Take sow away from cowslip to prune it (4) |
| DODECATHEON | Genus of the perennial plants known as American cowslip, or shooting star (11) |
| PAIGLE | Another name for the cowslip and oxlip |