| DEMOTIC | Of everyday language |
| IDIOTIC | Silly sort of everyday language mother banned (7) |
| VERNACULAR | Ordinary, everyday language |
| PRIMROSE | Yellow flower border in everyday language |
| PROSE | Soft pink in everyday language |
| ARAMAIC | Everyday language for Jesus? (7) |
| EARACHE | Otalgia, in everyday language |
| PROSECUTOR | Possible attorney's everyday language rocking court (10) |
| STEEN | Dutch artist noted for his depictions of everyday 17th-century life in paintings such as Rhetoricians at a Window, Beware of Luxury, The Effects of Intemperance, The Dancing Couple and The Merry Famil |
| EDWARDHOPPER | This American painter created realistic depictions of everyday urban scenes that shock the viewer into recognition of the strangeness of familiar surroundings. His painting entitled Chop Suey (1929) s |
| CORNERSHOP | A type of convenience store, grocer, minimart, newsagent, off-licence or other emporium of everyday goods, characteristically situated at the end of a local road or a junction in a residential area (6 |
| ETHNOMETHODOLOGY | Study of communication in the language of everyday conversation |
| EINSTEIN | Physicist who said "All of science is nothing more than the refinement of everyday thinking" |
| STILLLIFE | With examples such as Paul Czannes The Basket of Apples or Mary Cassatts Lilacs in a Window, a painting or drawing of everyday, inanimate objects (5,4) |
| SCIENCE | "The whole of ___ is nothing more than a refinement of everyday thinking": Einstein |
| GENRE | From the French meaning "kind" or "type", a style of painting that depicts scenes of everyday life (5) |
| IMPONDERABLES | David Feldman's series of books about trivial mysteries of everyday life |
| FREUD | "The Psychopathology of Everyday Life" author |
| VERISM | Use of everyday events in opera |
| SOAPOPERA | TV or radio series of everyday events |