| ANTILOG | Number corresponding to an exponent |
| INDICES | Numbers corresponding to entries' positions in matrices |
| TEXTBOOK | Conforming or corresponding to an established standard (8) |
| BASE | Number below an exponent |
| KATHAK | Birju Maharaj was an exponent of this dance |
| REAGANITE | An exponent of 1980s US economics (9) |
| ELIELSAARINEN | Who, an exponent of the Finnish Romantic style of early 20th-century architecture, had his designs f |
| ANDREDERAIN | French painter, an exponent of Fauvism, d.1954 (5,6) |
| GAUDI | Spanish architect who was an exponent of art nouveau in Europe (1852-1926)(5) |
| ANTONWEBERN | Austrian composer who was an exponent of the 12-tone technique |
| AQUATINT | A process of etching on copper, of which Goya was an exponent (8) |
| PIETMONDRIAN | Dutch painter; an exponent of the abstract art movement De Stijl (4,8) |
| IONESCO | An exponent of the Theatre of the Absurd, which French playwright wrote The Bald Soprano (1950) |
| HARP | Each string on this instrument produces one note, the gradation of string length from short to long corresponding to that from high to low pitch. (4) |
| MINOR | Term applied historically to an area of Asia roughly corresponding to modern Anatolia (5) |
| MISS | A failure to attain, catch, hit or reach; a flop, as opposed to a smash; or, a title corresponding to "mademoiselle" (4) |
| ISOMERE | Some anger about an organ corresponding to another (7) |
| VICOMTE | Title of a French nobleman corresponding to a British peer ranking above a baron and below an earl ( |
| CANAANITE | A member of an ancient Semitic people who occupied the region roughly corresponding to Israel before the Israelite conquest (9) |
| GAUL | An ancient region of Western Europe corresponding to present day Northern Italy, France, Belgium, part of Germany and the Southern Netherlands (4) |