| DECK | Knock someone to the floor of the ship (4) |
| FRENUM | Fold of tissue that connects the tongue to the floor of the mouth |
| YELL | Trade on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, perhaps |
| SOLE | Underside or bottom of a boot, clubhead, foot, oven or plough; the floor of a ship's cabin; or, the end of the chanter of a set of bagpipes (4) |
| STUN | To knock someone out, is to do what (4) |
| POSH | Like the top floor of the Beverly Wilshire |
| ERASE | Wipe the floor of the lift, so to speak (5) |
| TATE | Lydia Dingle found her collapsed on the floor of Home Farm in the Dales (3,4) |
| KEA | It rises 32,000 feet above the floor of the Pacific Ocean |
| SEABED | The floor of the ocean |
| STOREY | Set aside rivalry, finally, on the floor of the House |
| MARIANA | ____ Trench, a deep-sea depression in the floor of the Pacific Ocean (7) |
| RANULAS | Pale blue, tender cysts on the floor of the mouth (7) |
| AUTOMAT | Food dispenser placed on the floor of the car? (7) |
| TOYS | What the floor of a kid's room might be strewn with |
| HAIR | Stuff on the floor of a barbershop |
| DROP | Fall to the floor (4) |
| RINK | No second-class edge to the floor (4) |
| TACK | A short nail with a broad, flat head, often used for fastening carpets to the floor (4) |
| SPED | Drove with your foot to the floor |