| TALIPOT | Palm tree of the East Indies, Corypha umbraculifera, whose leaves are used for thatching houses (7) |
| PALMYRA | Tall Asian palm whose large fan-shaped leaves are used for thatching (7) |
| ROOIBOS | South African plant whose leaves are used for a popular herbal tea |
| NIPA | Asian palm tree whose feathery leaves are used for thatching (4) |
| OAKTREE | Its leaves are used for flavouring in cooking (3-4) |
| ROSEAPPLE | Ornamental tree of the East Indies cultivated for its edible fruit (4,5) |
| ACAI | South American palm tree of the genus Euterpe cultivated for its nutritious blackish-purple berries; E. oleracea (4) |
| COCODEMER | Palm tree of the Seychelles (Lodoicea maldivica) that produces the world's largest seed (4,2,3) |
| TEAK | Large tree of the East Indies yielding a valuable, dense wood (4) |
| SISAL | Central American plant, of the genus agave, whose leaves are used for rope (5) |
| LOVAGE | Plant of the parsley family whose leaves are used for flavouring food (6) |
| COCO | ___ de mer, a palm tree of the Seychelles, producing a large fruit containing a two-lobed edible nut (4) |
| REEDS | Stalks of wetland grasses used for thatching; a literary word for arrows; or, musical pipes (5) |
| SISHAM | East Indian tree whose leaves are used for fodder. |
| TEA | Evergreen of which the dried leaves are used for a beverage (3) |
| SUNN | Leguminous plant of the East Indies whose inner bark yields a fibre used in making rope and sacking (4) |
| COGON | Grass of the Philippines used for thatching (5) |
| HAULM | Stems of beans and peas and potatoes and grasses collectively as used for thatching and bedding |
| STRAW | Dried stalks of grain used for thatching, basketry, stable bedding or hats including bretons, boaters, panamas and fedoras (5) |
| TARRAGON | Aromatic perennial plant, Artemisia dracunculus, whose leaves are used for seasoning (8) |