| HOSPICE | Place of refuge, or for the terminally ill (7) |
| RETREAT | Place of refuge or privacy; or, the withdrawal by a military force from a place of danger (7) |
| HIDEOUT | Place of refuge or concealment (7) |
| SEMINAL | Influential name is working with the terminally ill (7) |
| SLENDER | One posting about the terminally ill being emaciated (7) |
| LECTERN | Stand with the terminally ill following recent developments (7) |
| SANCTUARY | A sacred place such as a shrine or temple; the holiest part of a church, also called the chancel; a place of refuge; or, a nature reserve (9) |
| TAPIOCA | Name for the naturally gluten-free bead-like cassava starch used as a thickener in puddings or for the pearls or "boba" in bubble tea (7) |
| HARBOUR | Old word for a refuge or shelter that came to mean a haven for ships (7) |
| SHELTER | Temporary refuge or residence for homeless persons (7) |
| STAINED | With "glass", the colourful, highly decorative matter used for church windows or for the lamps designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany (7) |
| ONENESS | Word for unity or for the state of being in harmony with something (7) |
| LISSOME | Terminally ill is a small number among the supple of body (7) |
| OUTPUTS | General term for quantities produced by machines, or for the data sent from computers to VDUs, printers etc (7) |
| CARTOON | From an Italian word that means "pasteboard." In English it refers to a type of drawing, usually intended as satire or for the purpose of humour. Its first known use dates to 1671. |
| RECLAME | French word for publicity or for the art by which notoriety is secured (7) |
| ASYLUM | Place of refuge or protection (6) |
| ALARM | Distress of the terminally ill after atomic weapon (5) |
| EASEL | Rest of painters comfort the terminally ill (5) |
| MUMBLED | Spoke quietly to relative, terminally ill in bed (7) |