| HOB | Male ferret; a shelf beside an open fire for keeping pans and kettles hot; a sprite such as Puck; or, the target stake in quoits (3) |
| RILL | Beer infused with ground ivy; a brook; a female ferret; a lamella of a mushroom; or, a wooded glen (4) |
| FAIRY | Sprite such as Shakespeare's Cobweb, Moth, Mustardseed or Peaseblossom, or any one of those illustrated by Cicely Mary Barker (5) |
| DISK | Puck or checker |
| ROLE | Puck or feste |
| DISC | Puck or checker |
| TINKER | An itinerant mender of kettles, pans and other household utensils made of metal; or, by extension, a word meaning to dabble or potter (6) |
| TEE | Homophonous with a tannic brew sipped warm or hot, a word for a peg from which a golf ball is shot (3) |
| NINNYSTOMB | In 3.1, the "rude mechanicals," as Puck has named them, are rehearsing their play. Bottom, who plays Pyramus, and Flute, who plays Thisbe, meet in the moonlight. Flute says, "As true as truest horse t |
| HOBS | Male ferrets; the tops of some cookers with hotplates; shelves at either side of open fireplaces; or, pegs used as targets in quoits (4) |
| COOKWARE | Pots and pans and such |
| CHARIVARI | A cacophonous mock serenade using kettles, pans and the like (9) |
| IRONWARE | Pots and kettles and pans |
| ROBINGOODFELLOW | Mischievous sprite of medieval English folklore also known as Puck (5,10) |
| ARIEL | Collection of poems by Sylvia Plath; a sprite in The Tempest; or, a character in The Little Mermaid (5) |
| PUCK | Disc used in ice hockey; or, a sprite of English folklore, also known as Robin Goodfellow (4) |
| MAPLE | A palm flourishing beside an English tree (5) |
| COPACABANA | Catch a taxi beside an area of beach (10) |
| PHOBIA | Morbid fear of soft male ferret with intimidating head and extra back? (6) |
| INPASSING | I bang pans and warble as I go |