| BADABING | Nightclub on "The Sopranos" that takes its name from "The Godfather" catchphrase |
| KNEEHIGHCS | Notes for sopranos that are only so tall? |
| BADA | ___ Bing! (nightclub on "The Sopranos") |
| NAMIBIA | The home of the Skeleton Coast, country with the capital Windhoek that takes its name from the world's oldest desert (7) |
| PARR | Word traditionally ascribed to the full moon in April; colour that takes its name from a sweet william-like flower; the chaffinch or its call; or, a name for a minnow or a samlet (4) |
| HANDLE | The bail or grip of a bucket, cup, mug, utensil etc that takes its name from the extremity used to hold said part; the tactile qualities of a textile; or, a slang term for one's name (6) |
| DISCORD | Row at a nightclub on the way (7) |
| EARL | - Grey; bergamot-flavoured Keemun tea that takes its name from the title of a prime minister of the UK who served in the 1830s (4) |
| MAY | Hawthorn or its blossom; or, a month that takes its name from a Roman goddess of fertility and spring, during which Beltane is observed on its first day (3) |
| CLARENCE | - House; Grade I royal residence in London that takes its name from the title of the duke and prince who became William IV the "Sailor King" (8) |
| SIGNEDON | Autograph on last wine is from The Godfather - that's why someone had a non-working benefit (6,2) |
| BARSAC | Variety of wine belonging to the Sauternes appellation that takes its name from a town in the Bordeaux region of France (6) |
| PLUNGE | - pool; body of water for invigorating the body after a sauna that takes its name from a type of basin or depression at the foot of a waterfall (6) |
| CHORISTER | Durham Cathedral school, attended by Rowan Atkinson and Tony Blair, that takes its name from the word for 'choir member'; The ... School |
| ERSKINE | - May; parliamentary rule book that takes its name from the former assistant librarian and later clerk of the House of Commons who wrote it (7) |
| VIOLET | Colour of the rainbow that takes its name from a pansy-like flower that is crystallised for cakes, used in perfumery or to flavour chocolate creams or parfait amour liqueur (6) |
| DUNEDIN | City on New Zealand's South Island that takes its name from the Gaelic word for Edinburgh (7) |
| AQUILA | Constellation that takes its name from the Latin for 'eagle' and has Altair as its brightest star (6) |
| ATLAS | Word for a book of maps that takes its name from the Greek Titan depicted on title pages of early such volumes; or, a figure of a man serving as an architectural column (5) |
| FEBRUARY | Month that takes its name from a seasonal Roman ritual and festival of cleanliness and purification that anticipated and prepared for the start of spring (8) |