| AMO | Part of Latin "to love" |
| AMAT | Part of Latin "to love" |
| EST | Form of Latin "to be" |
| PANORAMA | Prospect of gold in part of Latin America (8) |
| AGNUSDEI | Part of Latin Mass |
| NAME | Designation for part of Latin America (4) |
| INCUR | Suffer part of Latin curriculum |
| PUEBLO | A communal village in the southwestern US and parts of Latin America, consisting of one or more stone or adobe houses (6) |
| SURGE | Based on the Latin "to rise", a word used in its early sense to mean a fountain or stream, later a big wave, a billowing cloud, a sudden increase of power or a rush of emotion (5) |
| TENACULUM | Surgical hook or forceps used to grasp small body parts such as the ends of arteries; from Latin, 'to hold' (9) |
| TRAIT | From the Latin "to draw", a word for a touch of a pen or pencil in a picture originally, later a distinguishing feature of character or mind (5) |
| GRAVAMEN | In law, the part of a charge weighing most heavily against an accused person; from Latin, 'to load' (8) |
| CREPE | A thin fabric, pancake, rubber or tissue paper whose name, from Latin to Old French to English, highlights their shared characteristic of a crinkled, curled, frizzled or wrinkled texture (5) |
| ADNAUSEAM | (Latin) to the point of disgust (2,7) |
| CONCAVE | Dish with Spanish Latin to beware of (7) |
| LOT | There's much Latin to return to (3) |
| ADHOMINEM | Of an attack, directed against a person rather than their argument; Latin, 'to the person' (2,7) |
| TATAR | Language whose alphabet went from Arabic to Latin to Cyrillic |
| COGNOSCENTI | People with an informed appreciation of a particular subject, especially in the arts; from Latin, 'to know' (11) |
| NATURE | From the Latin "to be born", the collective phenomena of the physical world including animals and plants (6) |