| ROBUR | One of the Latin words for strength (5) |
| HIPPO | Augustine of -; one of the Latin Fathers of the Church; a Christian thinker whose major works include Confessions and The City of God (5) |
| LINOLEUM | The name of what floor covering is derived from the Latin words for "flax" and "oil"? (10) |
| CRAFT | Word for strength originally, later any boat or ship; a skilled trade; its collective members; dexterity or mastery in handiwork; or, cunning (5) |
| PORPOISE | Mammal whose name derives from the Latin words for "pig" and "fish" |
| MAIN | A word for strength; that which is essential; the principal/most part; the open sea; a large pipe or cable; a throw in hazard; or, a cockfighting match (4) |
| AVES | Pluralisation of the Latin word for "bird" that is the class of the aforementioned vertebrate, from Abbott's babbler to zebra finch (4) |
| UVULA | Flap-like extension of the soft palate whose name is a diminutive of the Latin for 'grape' (5) |
| GOURD | English translation of the Latin cucurbita, from which the melon family of plants is named (5) |
| VERIZON | Telecommunication company named as a combination of the Latin word for truth and the word "horizon" |
| MAMILLA | Diminutive form of the Latin word for "breast", a name for a nipple in English |
| CREDO | A set of beliefs, part of the Latin Mass (5) |
| IDEST | Latin words of clarification |
| LEPUS | Constellation south of Orion named after the Latin word for the hare (5) |
| OSTIA | The name of this ancient Roman port on the river Tiber is derived from the Latin word for mouth |
| VIGIL | Period of devotional observance named from the Latin word for wakefulness (5) |
| MOLAR | Class of tooth named from the Latin word for 'millstone' (5) |
| ROPER | Margaret ---, eldest daughter of Sir Thomas More who published a translation of the Latin work Precatio Dominica by Erasmus (5) |
| URSULA | Female given name, derived from a diminutive of the Latin word for bear (6) |
| PATER | Father of the Latin scholar? (5) |