| JOHNNYJUMPUP | Flower in the violet family often seen on roadsides |
| PANSY | Flower in the violet family |
| OSMONDS | Family often seen on "The Andy |
| CROCUS | Genus of flowering plants in the iris family often seen in early spring (6) |
| KNAPWEED | A tough-stemmed plant with purple thistle-like flower heads, often found in grassland and on roadsides (8) |
| SIGNPOSTS | Raised markers on roadsides providing information (9) |
| MAHOE | Small, bushy New Zealand tree of the violet family (5) |
| PURSE | Plant of the mustard family with heart-shaped seed pods and small white flowers, a common weed it can be seen in many parts of the world including by the roadsides of Mallorca (9,5) |
| SHEPHERDS | Plant of the mustard family with heart-shaped seed pods and small white flowers, a common weed it can be seen in many parts of the world including by the roadsides of Mallorca (9,5) |
| EPISCIA | Genus of flowering plants in the African violet family (7) |
| HAWTHORN | A shrub or tree of the rose family often used in hedges in the UK (8) |
| DILL | Aromatic herb in the celery family, often used in fish dishes (4) |
| CLEMATIS | Preferring its "head in the sun and feet in the shade", a climbing plant also aptly named traveller's joy for its prevalence along hedgerows, pathways and roadsides (8) |
| BLOODSTOCK | Bred-in-the-purple industry to run on track? (10) |
| IRON | Element "Fe" whose presence in a shooting star causes the latter to emit a yellow light as opposed to the violet glow created by calcium or the blue-green of magnesium (4) |
| HYACINTH | Spring flowering plant in the lily family often 'forced' to bloom indoors (8) |
| ALDER | Tree of the birch family, often found in marshy ground (5) |
| ROOKS | Birds in the crow family, often flocking with jackdaws (5) |
| CANARY | Small songbird of the finch family often yellowish-green in colour |
| SKINT | Broke, like the Slater family often is in EastEnders (5) |