| AARONSBEARD | Plant a border as an alternative |
| ENFRAMED | Put in a border, as a photo |
| PLEDGED | Place had a border as promised |
| DECKLEEDGED | Having a ragged border, as paper |
| ENDIVE | Plant border, as it happens, requiring trimming |
| EDGE | Border, as of the fairway |
| HOTEL | Bangladesh's eastern border as designated by NATO |
| MANITOBA | Uncontrolled state borders as far as British Canadian territory (8) |
| INVADERS | They occupy those who see The Border as something that can be overcome (8) |
| SCOTIA | Concave moulding North of the Border as the poet would say (6) |
| MAGINOTLINE | Concrete fortifications constructed by France along the Swiss and German borders as a defensive meas |
| POPPY | Drop by Paraguay's borders as a token of respect (5) |
| TATTOO | Military exercises eradicating country's borders as well (6) |
| GAZEBO | View first couple of borders as garden feature |
| USAGE | Flag some European countries raised at the borders, as is the custom |
| TIP | A helpful or practical hint; a race prediction; a pourboire; a nib; the end of a finger; a leafbud of a tea plant; a rubbish heap; or, a figurative pigsty (3) |
| TRAILER | A tracker; one who dallies, dawdles or lags; a creeping or rambling plant; a caravan, horse box, open cart, part of a lorry etc, towed by a cab, car or a tractor; a preview of a movie; or, a blank seg |
| STOCK | A tree trunk or main stem; a perennial part of a herbaceous plant; a person's ancestry or line of descent; a fund or store; or, a farm's collective animals, kept for meat or milk (5) |
| GUTTA | From the Latin for "drop", one of a series of pendent ornaments in the architrave of a Doric entablature; or, derived from the latex of a tropical plant, a "resist" used in silk painting |
| ALOE | As a plant, a sloe doesn't require sun (4) |