| ICEBERGLETTUCE | Salad plant, most of it under water (7,7) |
| IMMERSE | In order to simmer top of endive, plunge it under water (7) |
| ENTOMB | Bury the top of it under some bug-hunters (6) |
| ROSEBUSH | Plant most of bed so comes up in red |
| TURNED | Twisted half of it under, somehow (6) |
| ONION | Pungent vegetable - peel it under water to avoid weeping |
| PUMPKIN | Cultivar of a squash plant, most commonly of cucurbita pepo |
| LOVELIESBLEEDING | Plant, most beautiful, almost of red appearance |
| MISTLETOE | Plant most often displayed as part of Christmas decor(9) |
| THERMOPSIS | Genus of lupin-like plant - most perish, sadly |
| STEM | Part of a plant most likely to be affected by aphids or smuts (4) |
| ERICA | Genus of roughly 860 species of flowering plants, most between 20cm-150cm in height (5) |
| LOOSESTRIFE | Plant, most unconfined, abundant (11) |
| JUPITER | The plant most looked up to by the Romans (7) |
| OURARI | Plant most uncommon cutting in France, yes? |
| LANDFILL | The disposal of refuse by burying it under layers of earth (8) |
| ALSACE | France recovered it under the Treaty of Versailles |
| SUNSTROKE | We may avoid it under awning: pet hides under paper |
| SHEETOFICE | Would you find it under a blanket of snow? (5,2,3) |
| REPRESS | It concerns the media and how they keep it under (7) |