| FOLD | Flock of sheep; or, a crease in a newspaper or employed in origami (4) |
| TEND | Look after like a flock of sheep or a bar |
| RUCK | A loose scrum; a quarrel; a mass of ordinary people; or, a crease or pucker in a piece of fabric (4) |
| FOLDS | Pens/enclosures for livestock; flocks of sheep; or, creases, pleats, tucks or other doubling overs (5) |
| CLIP | A rapid pace or speed; an extract or snippet; a wallop or whack; a yield of wool sheared from a sheep or a flock; an old word meaning "embrace"; or, a barrette, bobby pin, hairgrip, slide or other fas |
| HEFT | Word whose various meanings include an unfenced area of grazing for a flock of sheep accustomed to shepherding themselves; bulk/weight, thus influence; a bundle of fastened sheets of paper; or, a fasc |
| PLEA | No end of a crease in suit |
| COPY | Textual content for publication in a newspaper or magazine (4) |
| DENT | Put a crease in |
| IRON | Put a crease in, perhaps |
| TRIP | Small flock of sheep (4) |
| HERD | Keep close together, like a flock of sheep |
| MAGI | Wise men engaged in origami standing up (4) |
| SELF | Word with taught or employed |
| EWES | Flock of sheep |
| FLOCK | Group of sheep; or, a material used for stuffing cushions or quilts (5) |
| PASTORAL | From "shepherd", a bucolic word pertaining to the care of a flock of sheep, thus of a "flock" of worshippers; or, country life (8) |
| FEATURE | A prominent article or story in a newspaper; or, the main full-length film in a cinema's programme (7) |
| WRITEUP | A published account of something, such as a review in a newspaper or magazine (5-2) |
| AGONYAUNT | A writer of an advice column in a newspaper or other periodical. (5,4) |