| LOSTART | Making flint arrowheads, e.g. |
| LADYSMANTLE | Plant Alchemilla vulgaris or "dew cup", whose Scottish name "elf-shot" refers to its use as a folk remedy for cattle made unwell by being shot at by supposed malevolent fairies with invisible flint ar |
| NEOLITH | Arrowhead, e.g. |
| FLINT | Stone for making axes and arrowheads in antiquity (5) |
| TEAR | Without a trace, arrowheads pull apart by force |
| FEAR | Be afraid of iron arrowheads |
| BARBS | Arrowheads |
| BARB | Fishing hooks have these, and so do some arrowheads (4) |
| BODKINS | Blunt needles for threading cord, elastic, ribbon or tape; ornamental hairpins; small daggers; or, long, thin arrowheads (7) |
| EGGS | Objects balanced on spoons in children's sports day races; or, ovoli alternating with leafy arrowheads or dart-like carvings in architecture (4) |
| QUARRELS | Word for squabbles or wrangles that also refers to square things, including panes of glass, tiles or arrowheads for the bolts of arbalests/crossbows (8) |
| ELFARROW | Prehistoric flint or stone arrowhead (3-5) |
| TOOL | Any one of numerous manual implements, from arrowhead, burin, flake, flint or tranchet of the Stone Age to the jigsaw or power drill of today (4) |
| ARUM | "Lily" with arrowhead-shaped leaves |
| TUBA | Piece of brass arrowhead found beneath Bath (4) |
| FIJI | Competitor of Aquafina and Arrowhead |
| APOLOGIA | A game soldier taking arrowhead for self-defence |
| CARAT | Weight of stone arrowhead in farm vehicle (5) |
| HALAL | Ritually killed by arrowhead in the corridor (5) |
| ABRUPT | Blunt arrowhead and rub out point (6) |