| EGAD | Exclamation that Robin theoretically could have used instead of phrases such as "Holy oleo!" or "Holy bargain basements, Batman!" (he actually said those) |
| HYMN | Song such as "Holy, Holy, Holy" |
| ROBIN | "Holy oleo!" speaker |
| NONET | Piece of music that (theoretically) could be played by the Wu-Tang Clan (5) |
| SLANG | Cant or jargon, such as that in the cockney rhyming style encompassing phrases such as apples and pears, china plate, mince pies, syrup of figs and treacle tart (5) |
| PLEONASM | Use of more words than are necessary to convey a meaning, as in phrases such as safe haven (8) |
| ONOMATOPOEIA | What is the formation of a word or phrase, such as "tick-tock", that phonetically represents what is |
| TAUTOLOGY | Use of redundant wording in phrases such as “opening introduction” |
| ADHESIVETAPE | I have pasted end of package, possibly ___ I could have used this (8,4) |
| SHREDDEDWHEAT | Phrases such as "I bet you can't eat three" promoted this cereal |
| IDIOM | Non-literal phrase such as 'cut the mustard' or 'right as rain' (5) |
| ADVERB | A modifying word or phrase such as 'fairly' or 'slowly' (6) |
| SUBJUNCTIVE | Form of the verb in a phrase such as 'If I were you' (11) |
| MOTIF | Recurring phrase, such as the first four notes of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony |
| MULE | Offspring of a male donkey and a female horse of Hol- fur- ac- |
| DONVALLEY | You could have used the Supertram to get to this sports stadium (3,6) |
| SEMICOLON | Mark that may be used to separate lists of phrases |
| MOTTO | Phrase such as with a coat of arms |
| CHIASMUS | Rhetorical device by which word-order is reversed between a pair of phrases of clauses (8) |
| ORONYM | Similar-sounding phrase, such as "I scream" for "ice cream" |