| ZOOTSUITS | Men's outfits consisting of baggy trousers and long jackets, popular in the US in the 1940s (4,5) |
| RHYTHMANDBLUES | Precursor of rock'n'roll that arose in the US in the 1940s (6,3,5) |
| COATS | Long jackets |
| DOUBLETS | ... and hose, Tudor men's outfits |
| BEBOP | Style of jazz developed in the USA in the 1940s (5) |
| MADNESS | British ska/pop band whose hit singles include Baggy Trousers and Our House (7) |
| SAFARI | 70s men's outfit, ... suit |
| ZOOTSUITER | An American wearing long baggy trousers and a long jacket with padded shoulders |
| NEHRU | Type of jacket popular in the '60s |
| SKINTIGHT | Opposite of baggy |
| PLUSFOURS | Golfer's baggy trousers gathered and fastened below the knee (4,5) |
| PANTALOON | Silly old stooge, one of a pair, in baggy trousers (9) |
| DOOWOP | Style of vocal-based rhythm and blues music popular in the US in the 1950s (3-3) |
| PLUS | A verbal rendering of the sign +, meaning "with the addition of", hence found in the name of baggy knickerbockers made with an extra four inches of fabric added to create an overhang at the knee (4) |
| FARTOOBIG | Like ridiculously baggy trousers of Bogart I tailored? (3,3,3) |
| ARTDECO | Style of design and interior decoration in Europe and the US in the 1920s and 1930s (3,4) |
| LINDY | Lively dance popular in the US in the 1930s, _ hop (5) |
| AMANDA | Female forename meaning "lovable", popular in the US in the 1980s |
| IWOJIMA | Island in the West Pacific that was the scene of prolonged fighting between Japan and the US in the Second World War (3,4) |
| RAGTIME | Style of syncopated piano music popular in the US from the 1890s to 1910s (7) |