| PEEDIE | In Scots, a tiny wee thing; or, a child's pear-shaped spinning top (6) |
| PLASH | Word for a twisted section of a living fence; a petty pool or puddle; a dabble; a downpour; a babble or a burble; a splish or a splosh; a squirt of water; or, in Scots, a jabble (5) |
| TEENY | Tiny/wee combo word |
| WASPSNEST | In Scots, a bike or byke (5,4) |
| FEEDER | Container filled with nuts or seeds for garden birds; a bib/bottle for a baby or a child; a tributary stream; or, a railway branch linking outlying areas to the trunk line (6) |
| CHEESE | An important person whose title comes from Persian for "thing"; or, a turophile's nibble of choice in the shape of a disc, truckle, wedge, wheel or, in modern times, a string (6) |
| BEAKER | A drinking bowl; a lab glass with a lip; or, a child's plastic tumbler (6) |
| MEMORY | The aggregate of everything retained by the mind; a recollection of a past event, person or thing; or, a computer's data storage area (6) |
| PEERIE | Orcadian or Shetlandic for something "wee", such as a traditional knitted flower or "flooer" motif; or, a Scottish word for a spinning top (6) |
| CHERUB | The little beast clutches her, the dear wee thing (6) |
| NATURE | A thing or a person's innate qualities / flora and fauna |
| HAMMER | - of the Scots; a name by which Edward I was known (6) |
| MAGNET | A thing or a person that attracts |
| SKERRY | (Scot.) A small reef or rocky island (6) |
| CORKIR | (Scot.) A red lichen used for dyeing (6) |
| STROMB | Ancient Greek "whirlwind, spinning top" or effectively anything that spins, today a spiral-shaped whelk-like conch with digitations like pins (6) |
| TURBOT | From the Latin meaning "spinning top", a brill- or windowpane flounder-like fish (6) |
| MIDGET | Tiny gadget with a spinning top (6) |
| BORE | A tidal wave; a tedious or tiresome person or thing; or, a gun's calibre (4) |
| TIPTOE | Move carefully, spinning top in game |