| PALPITATE | Rapidly beat hole in the roof of the mouth |
| CLEFTPALATE | Congenital split in the roof of the mouth (5,6) |
| PALATE | Word for the roof of the mouth, thus sense of taste; relish; flavour of wine; or, ability to appreciate the finer qualities of food or the aforesaid drink (6) |
| SKYLIGHT | Hole in the roof means most of Minogue in view (8) |
| SOFTPALATE | The posterior fleshy portion of the roof of the mouth (4,6) |
| HARDPALATES | Bony portion of the roof of the mouth (pl.) (2 wds) |
| ATTIC | Spies come back to hide bottle essentially in a room in the roof of a house (5) |
| PALATAL | Relating to the roof of the mouth |
| HARDPALATE | Difficult to get a dish round the roof of the mouth |
| SUNROOF | Panel in the roof of a car that can open for extra ventilation (7) |
| OLDSHIP | A mannequin of a sailor adorns the roof of The ___ ___ Inn, a Macclesfield pub in the style of a Tudor roadhouse (3,4) |
| CATESBY | Robert ......., leader of the 1605 Gunpowder Plot, whose head was later stuck on the roof of the House of Commons (7) |
| TIBETAN | From that area of the Himalayas known as the roof of the world |
| PEANUTBUTTER | Roof-of-the-mouth sticker |
| PAMIR | Mountain range of Central Asia, chiefly in Tajikistan, popularly known as the 'Roof of the World' (5) |
| TIBET | The Dalai Lama's land, known as the Roof of the World |
| TIBETANS | They live on the Roof of the World, in Lhasa perhaps (8) |
| POMEGRANATE | Used to make grenadine, a fruit depicted with portcullises, Tudor roses and fleurs-de-lis in the roof carvings of the cloisters of St Stephen's Chapel (11) |
| LOFTY | The sort of ideal you find in the roof space? (5) |
| WHISK | Rapidly beat food |