| MANTEAU | Robe or cloak |
| APRON | From a misdivision of "tablecloth", a word for a barm-cloth, bib, brat, pinafore or placket; or, something similar, such as a bishop's cassock, Freemason's robe, or a lead tabard worn as a shield duri |
| BATH | Word that can precede robe or room |
| DIS | Prefix for robe or respect |
| MAGECONSULTANTS | Advisors on robe or wand selection? |
| MANTLE | Shawl or cloak regarded as a symbol a person's power or authority (6) |
| WRAP | Cape or cloak |
| TUNIC | Loose-fitting shirt or cloak (5) |
| PALL | Veil, covering or cloak (4) |
| VEIL | Mask or cloak |
| OUTERGARMENT | Coat or cloak, say |
| DRESS | One-piece garment also called a gown, robe or frock (5) |
| GOWN | Floor-length formal dress; banyan; members of a university; a barrister's robe; or, a surgeon's scrubs (4) |
| KITEL | White Seder robe or burial shroud worn by orthodox males (Hebrew) (5) |
| CASSOCK | Long robe or outer coat worn by clergy and choristers |
| VERMILION | Chinese-red or scarlet colour of cinnabar, "fire-headed" flycatchers, garnets, holly berries, jewel-like pomegranate arils, poinsettia bracts, robins' breasts, rubies, St Nicholas's bishop's robes or |
| OARLOCK | Camouflage or cloak what keeps the row steadily going (7) |
| DOMINO | Black-and-white piece with pips used in a traditional game; a bounty hunter depicted by Keira Knightley in a film; a Bond girl; or, cloak and mask worn as a masquerade costume (6) |
| GREGO | A short jacket or cloak, made of very thick, coarse cloth, with a hood attached. (5) |
| UNSINFUL | Virtuous nuns in full robes (or less). (8) |