| XENON | Heavy noble gas that derives its name from the Greek for strange (5) |
| RADON | Heavy noble gas |
| PAPER | Writing material that derives its name from its ancient Egyptian plant of origin; a broadsheet; or, an essay (5) |
| ATLAS | Word for a book of maps that takes its name from the Greek Titan depicted on title pages of early such volumes; or, a figure of a man serving as an architectural column (5) |
| HALMA | Board game which takes its name from the Greek word for leap (5) |
| ARGON | Noble gas that makes up nearly 1% of the earth's atmosphere |
| IRENE | Girl's name from the Greek word for peace (5) |
| BUGLE | Which musical instrument derives its name from Latin for a signalling ox horn? (5) |
| DENIM | Sturdy fabric which derives its name from the French city of Nimes (5) |
| EOCENE | Geological epoch that derives its name from the Greek for dawn (6) |
| LITHIUM | A soft, silvery metal that derives its name from the Greek for 'stone' (7) |
| CUBE | Six-sided 3-D solid that derives its name from the Greek for "a die" (4) |
| MIMOSA | Flowering plant that derives its name from the Greek word for 'mimic' (6) |
| EOSIN | Name, from the Greek for "dawn" in reference to a rose colour it imparts to silk, of a red fluorescent dye (5) |
| AZURE | Shade of sky-blue which derives its name from lapis lazuli (5) |
| UBER | U.S. ride-hailing app that derives its name from the German for 'above all the rest' (4) |
| EOLIENNE | Poplin-like dress fabric that derives its name from the ruler of the winds in Greek mythology (8) |
| BATH | From Germanic meaning "to warm", a word for a hot tub or hammam; or, a spa city in England that derives its name from its hot springs (4) |
| JERSEY | Pullover or sweater that derives its name from the largest of the Channel Islands, where the knitting of worsted articles was a staple industry (6) |
| KUNGFU | Martial art that derives its name from the Chinese phrase for combat skill (4,2) |