| WINY | Having a bouquet, maybe |
| URN | Place for a bouquet, maybe |
| WINIER | Having a stronger bouquet, maybe |
| ODORANT | Having a bouquet to adorn party (7) |
| ACHROMATIC | Receiving honour, having a bouquet devoid of colour |
| ODORIFEROUS | Having a bouquet prepared for our side only at first |
| SUITORS | Ones with bouquets, maybe |
| PILLAR | A space-occupying substance or thing, such as a present placed in a Christmas stocking, a stem of foliage/greenery incorporated into a bouquet or the tobacco in a cigar (6) |
| NIDE | Group of pheasants on the ground as opposed to a bouquet when flushed or a brace as a pair (4) |
| AROMA | A bouquet would make a romantic start |
| FRAGRANCE | Kid in a foreign country with a bouquet |
| SPRAY | Sidestep a flat fish for a bouquet |
| AROMATIC | A nameless, passionate person with a bouquet |
| ASCENT | A bouquet can give a lift (6) |
| NEWMAN | Andrea -, author of novels A Bouquet of Barbed Wire and A Sense of Guilt (6) |
| LILACTIME | 1928 Gary Cooper romance in which a bouquet plays a vital role |
| LEIOR | "I think I'll get a ___, ___ a bouquet perhaps." ...said the shopper in the flower shop in hawaii |
| MORISOT | Artist depicted with a bouquet of violets in a painting by Edouard Manet (7) |
| PHEASANT | Known collectively as a bouquet, brace and nide, a gallinaceous game bird native to Asia but now common in the British countryside (8) |
| THYME | Fragrant evergreen perennial used as a companion plant for cabbages, roses and strawberries or as part of herbes de Provence mixtures or a bouquet garni (5) |