| EYESPOTS | Features of a peacock's tail |
| EYESPOT | Feature of a peacock's tail |
| EYE | Feature of a peacock's tail |
| PLUME | Part of a peacock's train |
| EYES | Markings on a peacock's tail feathers; holes in needles; or, the calm regions at the centre of hurricanes or storms (4) |
| ARGUS | The hundred eyes of which monster turned into a peacock's tail when it was killed? (5) |
| FANCY | Ornate, like a peacock's tail |
| FANOUT | Spread, like a peacock's tail |
| OCELLI | The "eyes" on a peacock's tail |
| PRIDE | Collective noun for a social unit of lions; a peacocks attitude of display when fanning his tail to attract a peahen; or, one of the seven deadly sins (5) |
| TRAIN | Cascade of silk or satin at the back of a wedding gown; or, a peacock's flowing eye-spotted feathers (5) |
| SPOTS | Markings such as a Dalmatian's flecks, an English setter's speckles, a ladybird's dots, a leopard's rosettes or a peacock's ocelli (5) |
| SEAWEED | Conjured into a ship by Gwydion in The Mabinogion, marine algae with species in shades of brown, green or red, including carrageen, dulse, laver, oyster thief, peacock's tail, sargasso, tangle and wra |
| THREE | A peacock's train only develops after ___ years |
| STRUT | Act as a peacock's prop? (5) |
| FANS | Shapes of peacocks' tails during courtship displays; or, baskets once used for winnowing grain (4) |
| FANSHAPED | Like the peacock's tail lover's husband sent up |
| ALGA | Latin word for coral weed, dulse, furbelows, Irish moss, mermaid's tresses, peacock's tail, sea lace, tangles or other brown, green or red photosynthetic eukaryote, commonly called kelp or seaweed (4) |
| MAINCLAUSE | Features of a lion articulated in part of a sentence (4,6) |
| TERRAIN | Physical features of a tract of land (7) |