| MARKSTIME | From the days of the Evangelist, just awaits developments |
| COLONIAL | From the days of an empire |
| IMHIP | "Got it," from the days of beatniks |
| TTFN | Cutesy "see ya!" from the days of AIM |
| DOLE | Slang term for a state benefit, deriving from the days of charitable handouts (4) |
| SEPTETS | The colors of the rainbow and the days of the week, e.g. |
| SEPTET | The Dwarfs or the days of the week, e.g. |
| SEQUENCES | The Fibonacci numbers and the days of the week, e.g. |
| SCTV | It featured the parody soap "The Days of the Week" |
| ALMANAC | What is a calendar of the days of the year (7) |
| WHITE | The ?, Mikhail Bulgakov novel on which stage play The Days of the Turbins was based (5,5) |
| WHITEGUARD | The ?, Mikhail Bulgakov novel on which stage play The Days of the Turbins was based |
| SOLOMONGRUNDY | Central character of a short rhyme concerning the days of the week (7,6) |
| GUARD | The -, Mikhail Bulgakov novel on which stage play The Days of the Turbins was based (5,5) |
| OLDSCHOOLYARD | Cat Stevens "(Remember the Days of The) ___" |
| CAPRI | Italian island, a resort since the days of the Roman Republic |
| TIFFIN | Light meal in the days of the Raj (6) |
| OLDEN | Like the days of the golden past (5) |
| LONGEST | Like June 21 among all the days of the year |
| PHILIP | -- the Evangelist, one of the seven deacons appointed by the early church (6) |