| IMPLORARE | Lit., to invoke with tears, ergo to entreat, to appeal to something |
| BEG | Entreat to be good (3) |
| SUSPICARI | Lit. to mistrust, ergo to suppose, surmise (1st. dep.): opinari, reri |
| ASPICERE | Lit. to gaze upon, ergo to consider, weigh up |
| DONC | Ergo, to Descartes |
| YEGODS | Words to invoke the old divinities in the theatre? (2,4) |
| IMPRESS | The newspaper follows one Moslem leader to invoke admiration (7) |
| KHIA | "My Neck, My Back" artist whose name is often used to invoke irrelevance |
| INIRE | Lit. to enter, metaph. somnum ____, to go to the Land of Nod |
| ESSECORDI | To be loved, lit. to be to the heart (+ dat) |
| URGENCY | Pressing need to entreat US city to restrict carbon (7) |
| APPEAL | Pop back with the ring to entreat (6) |
| ENDEAR | Last listener to invoke affection |
| MALEDICTION | Words aiming to invoke ruin |
| IRE | Unpleasant thing to invoke |
| RABBITS | Immortalised in Richard Adams' story Watership Down, herbivorous animals such as cottontails whose mention on the first day of a month is said to invoke good luck (7) |
| ERATO | Time to invoke the Muse |
| HIP | Word meaning "aware, informed, sophisticated"; a coxa; an exclamation used to invoke a communal cheer; or, a vitamin C-rich fruit of a wild rose (3) |
| UTIFORO | To look after your interests, lit. to use the market-place (vide Ter. Ph. 79) |
| NAUSEARE | To feel disgust (lit. to be sea-sick) eg Cic. N.D. 1.84 |