| UNDERESTIMATED | Placed too small a value upon (14) |
| UNDERCHARGE | Can drug here get synthesized for too small a cost? |
| CRAM | Force into too small a space |
| DWARFISH | Ward off shark, perhaps being on too small a scale (8) |
| OVERESTIMATING | Calculating at too high a value (14) |
| PICCOLO | From the Italian meaning "small", a half-size flute; a quarter-size bottle of champagne also called a split; or, a variety of cherry tomato (7) |
| BEANBAG | When small, a missile; when large, a seat |
| NUTSHELL | Invalid to capture article about Society in so small a place? |
| SAMBA | Small, a male graduate having dance (5) |
| SWEET | Pudding course is very small a stone, about (5) |
| ATOMIC | Very small, a cat, I see and hear (6) |
| SADDLED | Small a" rotten to be stuck with (7) |
| SARI | Indian woman's garment, small - a royal takes one (4) |
| TREAT | "Cats can have little a salami, as a ___" |
| PICCOLOS | From Italian for "little", a word for small flutes aka ottavinos; organ stops of similar tone; ponies, quarter bottles, snipes or splits of champagne; or, in Sweden, bellboys or bellhops (8) |
| SALAMI | "Cats Can Have Little a ___" [sic] (meme about whether it's okay for cats to have a type of sausage) |
| RALF | _ Little, a star of The Royle Family (4) |
| APER | Little, a lot of the time |
| SWEETS | Desserts after two smalls, a bite of turkey and salmon (6) |
| COMPACT | Little a agreement (7) |