| CANTILEVER | Projecting support, in architecture (10) |
| PLINTH | Column support in architecture |
| BUTTRESS | Projecting support for wall (8) |
| BRACKET | Projecting support |
| ROMANESQUE | (In architecture) Norman (10) |
| COLONNADES | In architecture, long sequences of evenlyspaced columns (10) |
| BRACKETS | Projecting supports, for a shelf say (8) |
| MACKINTOSH | Charles Rennie ___, leader of the Art Nouveau movement in architecture (10) |
| QUATREFOIL | A four-leafed clover; or, a stylised decorative representation of said lucky charm or "truelove" in architecture, art, heraldry, textiles or tracery (10) |
| ANCON | In architecture, a projecting console that supports, or appears to support, a cornice (5) |
| ENTASIS | In architecture, a slight bulge in a column |
| LIERNE | In architecture, a cross-rib used in vaulting |
| OCULI | Meaning "eyes" in Latin, circular windows in architecture (5) |
| ANNULET | In architecture, a moulding in the form of a ring, as at the top of a column (7) |
| SCHOOL | Intellectual or creative movement, such as the Frankfurt in social theory or the Chicago in architecture (6) |
| DECO | Art -; design oeuvre in architecture, decorative arts, jewellery, glass and interiors that originated in the 1920s (4) |
| TRACERY | In architecture, ornamental stone openwork of bars and ribs supporting the glass lights in a Gothic window (7) |
| EGGS | Objects balanced on spoons in children's sports day races; or, ovoli alternating with leafy arrowheads or dart-like carvings in architecture (4) |
| TIVOLI | Hadrian's Villa, built in the 2nd century CE at this Italian city, is considered the epitome in architecture of the opulence and elegance of the Roman world. The villa, also known as Villa Adriana, wa |
| SCROLLS | Ancient books in the form of cylinders of parchment or papyrus; or, ribbon-like ornaments bearing mottoes or inscriptions in architecture, art or heraldry (7) |