| GILDED | Like a cage rather than a lily (6) |
| UPSHOT | Result in the end a six rather than a four? (6) |
| BIOGAS | ______ differs from natural gas in that it is a renewable energy source produced biologically through anaerobic digestion rather than a fossil fuel (6) |
| LUXURY | An indulgence rather than a necessity (6) |
| JACANA | This water bird is also called a lily trotter or a lotus bird. It has extremely long toes and claws that spread the bird's weight, allowing it to walk on floating water-lily leaves. |
| FLORIN | From "bloom", an old aurous coin of Firenze bearing said city's emblem of a lily or a fleur-de-lis on the obverse (6) |
| AFLOAT | Like a lily pad |
| VALISE | Case of half a lily in flower pot (6) |
| CROAKS | Laments from those on a lily-pad? (6) |
| COWARD | Fellow protege, a lily-livered type (6) |
| YELLOW | Saffron a€“ lily-livered (6) |
| WETBOB | An Etonian oarsman, rather than a cricketer |
| PRELAW | College track (rather than a major) |
| UNITER | What George W. Bush claimed to be (rather than a divider) |
| JEREMY | ____ Fisher, frog created by children's author Beatrix Potter who has a lily-pad boat (6) |
| JERSEY | Millais' portrait of Lillie Langtry was called A ... Lily |
| RACEME | Simple inflorescence, as in a lily of the valley |
| LEAPED | Left a lily pad |
| PIP | Word for a single blossom; a lily of the valley rhizome; a chirp of a bird; a dot on a domino; or, from the name of an apple grown from seed, a tiny fruitlet or kernel of a Bramley, Cox, grape, strawb |
| CUP | Shape of a candlestick's bobeche for catching dripping wax; a structure at the base of an acorn; a fruit punch served in a pitcher rather than a bowl; or, a vessel from which to sip tea (3) |