| PALEA | Grass flower bract |
| LEAVES | Cactus spines and flower bracts are modified _. |
| BOUGAINVILLEA | Tropical woody vine with showy flower bracts (13) |
| TWEED | Opening of the grass flower |
| PLUME | Showy feather; a pampas grass flower; a long-legged moth; an aigrette; or, a trail of smoke (5) |
| SPATHE | In botany, a sheathing bract enclosing the flower or spadix of plants including the arum, day flower, palm, peace lily and crocus (6) |
| CUP | Hemispherical tea holder to which an acorn bract, brassiere balconette, butter-yellow ranunculaceous flower, egg holder, golf hole, sports trophy and many other things are likened (3) |
| LEAF | Bract |
| FOLIAGE | Bract |
| GLUME | Bract |
| LEAFLET | Bract can authorise tract (7) |
| ARUMLILY | Ornamental plant with a brilliant yellow spike of flowers in a funnel-like bract (4,4) |
| CHATTERBOX | The bract demolished by cow with big mouth (10) |
| PHYLLARY | Your associate has perhaps initially put back bract |
| CUPULE | From "cask, tub", a botanical word for the small woody thimble- or teabowl-like domed bract holding the smooth oval nut of an acorn (6) |
| BURR | A prickly seedcase of a hardoke or clote; or, any clinging bract or thing (4) |
| LEMMA | Homograph whose disparate meanings range from a dictionary entry and theorem for a proof, to a grassy bract also called a flowering glume (5) |
| NIGELLA | With cultivars including Miss Jekyll, Persian jewels and Cambridge blue, a flower with lacy- or hazy-like bracts, also called love-in-a-mist (7) |
| EDELWEISS | Alpine plant with downy leaves and small flower heads held in stars of glistening whitish bracts |
| TEASEL | Fuller's - - - - - -, dipsacus having flower heads within hooked bracts (6) |