| IPSA | Itself, in a Latin phrase |
| ALII | "Others" in a Latin phrase |
| FIRMA | Solid, in a Latin phrase |
| AMOUR | Love finds itself in a drink knocked back (5) |
| SOLITAIRE | Gemstone set by itself in a piece of jewelry |
| MAGPIE | Bird that can recognize itself in a mirror |
| EYAM | The Derbyshire village that quarantined itself in a 1665 plague |
| BIRDSNEST | Flyer's abode may find itself in a soup (5,4) |
| PALETTE | Let the peat compost itself in a range of colours (7) |
| ASICS | Sneaker brand that's an acronym of a Latin phrase meaning "a sound mind in a healthy body" |
| QED | Abbreviation of a Latin phrase for "which was to be demonstrated or proved", used at the end of a formal proof and as the title of a former BBC science documentary series (1,1,1) |
| IPSO | Part of a Latin phrase in trips overseas |
| DILL | This can find itself in a pickle |
| SECONDBATTLEOFYPRES | Canada distinguished itself in action in World War I in Belgium in 1915 in the ___ ___ ___ ___ |
| ENTER | "Abandon all hope, ye who - here"; translation of a Latin phrase in Dante's Inferno (5) |
| IBID | Abbreviation of a Latin phrase meaning "in the same place" (4) |
| ENNUI | French word for acedia, boredom, languor or tedium that, like "annoy", stems for a Latin phrase meaning "it is hateful to me" or "I hold in hatred" (5) |
| ETC | Abbr. of a Latin phrase |
| ADINTERIM | A Latin phrase meaning temporarily (2,7) |
| PHOENIX | In Greek mythology, this bird is a long-lived bird that cyclically regenerates itself. In Henry VI, Part 3 (act 1, scene 4), York says, "My ashes as the ___, may bring forth / A bird that will revenge |