| DISCIPLINAL | Science place popular in the face of a field of study (11) |
| SBARRO | Pizza place popular in food courts |
| ROCK | I picked up a touristy gift for you at this place, popular with holidaymakers, near Padstow (4) |
| ALABAMA | A science place followed by a scholar in one of the states (7) |
| DISCIPLE | Pass securing science place for some teacher's student (8) |
| ZOOMTOWNS | Places popular among remote workers, in slang |
| LAB | Science place |
| FULLOFBEANS | Energetic description of a field of runners? (4,2,5) |
| ARCHAEOLOGY | A field of study one can really "dig" in Israel (11) |
| GRAMMAR | The morphology and syntax of a language; a book containing a description of said linguistry; or, the basic rules of a field of knowledge (7) |
| FILIPENDULA | Genus of meadowsweet and dropwort - version of a field lupin (11) |
| CONNOISSEUR | Person with special appreciation of a field (11) |
| PACESETTERS | Power shown by excellent dogs, those at the front of a field? (4-7) |
| CLOSEDRANKS | United in the face of a challenge |
| APPLIED | Of a field of study, put to practical use as opposed to being theoretical (7) |
| AREA | Originally meaning "space allocated for a specific purpose", a word for the extent/measurement of a surface or piece of land; a field of study; or, a geographical region (4) |
| FLEURON | Flower-like ornament employed in Gothic architecture or found at the centre of the face of a Corinthian abacus; or, a puff pastry garnish in the form of a crescent moon (7) |
| ROEDEER | I spotted a wild doe right in the middle of a field on the outskirts of Exmoor -- it has a red summer coat that turns greyish in the winter (3,4) |
| TRANSCENDS | Goes beyond the range or limits of a field of activity (10) |
| ALLOTMENT | Historically, a portion of a field assigned by a landowner to a tenant cottager for tillage, later a plot of land rented by an individual as a non-commercial kitchen garden (9) |