| COAGULATED | Glued with a coat it became quickly congealed |
| DUN | Greyish brown; a horse with a coat of this colour, combined with a black mane and tail; an importunate debt collector; a hill-fort; or, a fishing fly resembling a subimago mayfly (3) |
| SHELLAC | Woman to call back to coat it with a shiny surface (7) |
| MACAQUE | Coat, it being shed by a pretty monkey |
| VANISH | Being right away from a clear coat, it will disappear (6) |
| SORREL | A reddish-brown or chestnut hue; a horse with a coat of this colour; a dock with arrow-shaped sour leaves; or, in the Caribbean, red hibiscus flower tea (6) |
| DREDGE | Dig in the channel, or coat it (6) |
| STARK | In the A Song of Ice and Fire novels and television adaptation Game of Thrones, the house with a coat of arms bearing a depiction of a dire wolf (5) |
| PINEMARTEN | It looks like a squirrel with a coat like a stoat: permanent in endless evolution. (4,6) |
| ROAN | A horse with a coat sprinkled with white hairs (4) |
| TAKEN | Like a movie seat with a coat on it |
| SLIGO | Uses last rag and rubs grease on to coat it over in the west |
| JOSEPH | Depicted in a pop oratorio, the name of a biblical figure with a coat of many colours (6) |
| STRIPED | With a coat like a zebra (7) |
| TUNICATE | A sea-squirt with a coat one devoured (8) |
| NYALA | African antelope with a coat marked with vertical stripes (5) |
| CATDOOR | Opening for a pet made with a coat rod |
| EWE | One in a cote with a coat |
| PLATED | With a coat of a different metal (6) |
| CATFUR | Dog swallows congealed fat and his enemy's coat (3,3) |