| CONCLUSION | End or termination |
| FINAL | Occurring at or forming an end or termination (5) |
| DEATHS | Demises, ends or terminations? (6) |
| APSE | A semicircular recess or termination at the eastern end of a Roman basilica or an Anglo-Saxon or Norman place of worship, e.g. (4) |
| ENDING | Finale or termination (6) |
| DEMISE | Failure or termination (6) |
| ANNULMENT | Cancellation or termination, often of a marriage (9) |
| FINIAL | From Latin for "end", an ornament or pommel in the form of an acorn, foliated fleur-de-lis, pine cone, poppy-head, spike etc at the end or top of a bench, curtain pole, gable or spire (6) |
| AIM | Goal or end or objective |
| TERMINUM | An end, or boundary, or the god of such (acc. sing.) |
| OMEGA | Last Greek letter whose symbol in upper-case is used to denote ohm in physics or the end or limit of a set (5) |
| TACTIC | Plan, procedure, or expedient for promoting a desired end or result. (6) |
| TAILORMADE | Perfect end or absurd end to episode? (6-4) |
| ROAD | Old English journey on horseback, but today's carriageway, lane, street or track, perhaps high, causing rage, leading to a dead end or driving one around the proverbial bend (4) |
| CLOSURE | An end or shutting, whether referring to a door, the guillotine rule, a shop or a traumatic event (7) |
| TRUNCATE | Terminate abruptly by having or as if having an end or point cut off (8) |
| FLOTSAM | The bobbing, drifting or washed-up wreckage or cargo of a ship, hence discarded objects, drifters, odds and ends or vagrants (7) |
| DEAD | End or head type |
| TAG | Kind of end or team |
| ADOUGHNUT | What has no beginning, end, or middle? |