| EINE | German for "one" |
| EINS | German for "one" |
| EIN | German for 'one' (3) |
| LIFE | Word, related to the German for "body", for one's course of existence; fauna and flora collectively; a painting of a real, rather than imaginary, model; or, a biography (4) |
| TAKEIN | Occasionally thank one German for house |
| HAMMERKLAVIER | Name for a Beethoven sonata, from the German for "fortepiano" |
| ERSATZ | From German for "replacement", what is a product made as an imitation of a better one? (6) |
| KLANG | German for "sound", used by some music theorists as a name for a "chord of nature" |
| DECIDER | Month before one gets the German for crucial game (7) |
| POODLE | From the German for "puddle hound" or "splash in water", an often highly pampered pooch, originally bred as a water dog for hunting (6) |
| BOWER | From the Old English for "dwelling" and the German for "birdcage", a shady spot under trees in a wood or a garden; a picturesque country cottage; or, a lady's private boudoir (5) |
| CHIC | Believed to be borrowed from the German for "skill", a French word for elegance and style in dress (4) |
| KRAFT | From the German for "strength", tough wrapping paper for bouquets, grocery bags, parcels etc (5) |
| POKER | Thought to be related to the German for "brag", the name of a card game of bluff and skill; a bugbear; a mace-bearer; a salamander for stirring a fire; or, a stiff person (5) |
| STROLLS | From the German for "vagrants" or "vagabonds", a word for ambles, rambles, saunters or wanderings (7) |
| STREUSEL | From the German for "sprinkle", a crumbly topping for apple cakes, fruit pies, muffins or rich pastries (8) |
| KITSCH | From the German for "trash", a term for art, decor, design, fashion etc considered garish, tasteless, vulgar or of questionable aesthetic value (6) |
| NOSH | From Middle High German for "nibble" or "eat in secret", a Yiddish word used as British slang for food (4) |
| MANE | Related to Old High German for "necklace", a word for the encolure of a horse or the crest hair of a lion (4) |
| PEZ | Candy named from the German for "peppermint" |