| PROPAGATE | Raise plants, for example, to support an entry (9) |
| ELEGANCE | Support an entry for Chaucer in "Early English Style" |
| SUSPENDER | Strap to support an item of clothing (9) |
| KEEPCOUNT | Maintain records of how to support an earl (4,5) |
| EGLANTINE | Plant, for example, wants worker brought into line (9) |
| HERBALISM | Word for the study and use of medicinal plants for one's comfort, healing, health and welfare, from calendula for one's skincare and comfrey/knitbone for wound repair, to rosemary for the hair and fra |
| AQUILEGIA | Flowering plant for example, one in Abruzzi capital |
| BREWERIES | Fermenting plants for alcoholic beverages (9) |
| TREEFERNS | Plants for seabirds guarding hazard to shipping (4,5) |
| PHOSPHATE | Potash he arranged round the first of the plants for fertiliser (9) |
| SECONDLOT | Support an old Sodomite's offering early in auction (6,3) |
| HERBARIUM | Collection of preserved and catalogued plants for scientific study, such as the one at Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (9) |
| PALMTREES | Handy plants for sandy shade? (4,5) |
| LOCOWEEDS | Problematic plants for ranchers |
| LEGUMINOUS | Description of certain plants, for example, illuminated externally (10) |
| CAROTENOIDS | Red, yellow and orange pigments seen in plants, for example in carrots |
| EXOTICS | Rarely seen plants, for example |
| BACKDOWN | Have to submit to support an Irish county (4,4) |
| TEASELS | Prickly plants, for example |
| BARRAGE | The 'creeping ___' was developed in the First World War as an effective use of artillery fire to support an infantry attack (7) |