| RIDERLESS | Having no jockey lacking a clause (9) |
| PROVISION | Supply of a clause in a deed (9) |
| ESCALATOR | Real cost disguised with introduction of a clause in contract (9) |
| CAT | What's the difference between a ___ and a comma? A ___ has claws at the ends of its paws, a comma is a pause at the end of a clause |
| RIDER | A biker, chevalier, cyclist or jockey; Sir Henry Haggard's middle name; or, a clause in a performer's contract, stipulating personal requirements (5) |
| ARTICLE | A clause of the Creed or of a contract; an item of business; the adjective "the"; a feature, piece, report or other journalistic composition; or, an object, thingamy or whatsit (7) |
| PROVISO | A clause in a document or contract that embodies a condition or stipulation (7) |
| VANMORRISON | Irish singer who, to fulfil a clause in a contract, cut 31 songs with titles such as Ring Worm and Want a Danish? |
| AMENDED | Made changes to a contract or a clause (7) |
| COMMA | Pause after a clause |
| AMEND | Add a clause to, e. g. |
| CLUE | Helpful information, as from a clause |
| RHEME | Part of a clause giving information about the theme (5) |
| CASUAL | Temporary employee revised a clause almost completely (6) |
| RELATIVEPRONOUN | "THAT," E.G., WHEN USED TO INTRODUCE A CLAUSE (2 WDS) |
| CASUALTIES | A clause - it's especially designed for accident victims (10) |
| PHRASE | A clause, expression, group of words, idiom or other thing said (6) |
| CORIANDER | Company contract clause about a new spice (9) |
| ADDARIDER | Put in an extra clause or a proviso in a legal document (3,1,5) |
| HYPOTAXIS | In grammar, the subordination of one clause to another, typically using a conjunction (9) |