| BLIND | Screen for a window, such as that in the ruched festoon style (5) |
| DORMERS | Windows such as these are seen in Sunderland or Merseyside (7) |
| CHANT | A repetitive plainsong, such as that in the Gregorian manner; or, a repeated rhythmic slogan, sung or spoken by a crowd in unison (5) |
| SLANG | Cant or jargon, such as that in the cockney rhyming style encompassing phrases such as apples and pears, china plate, mince pies, syrup of figs and treacle tart (5) |
| DANSE | Terpsichorean sequence such as that in the allegorical "macabre" style, symbolising universality of death (5) |
| STRIPE | An old word for a whip to the flesh with a scourge or lash; a band of colour; a banded cloth or pattern, such as that in the Breton or candy style; or, a chevron on a sleeve (6) |
| SKIFF | A small boat such as that in Jerome K Jerome's Three Men in a Boat |
| GORGE | Ravine such as that in Cheddar, Somerset; or, the crop of a hawk (5) |
| METRO | Underground railway system. such as that in Paris (5) |
| RAGU | Italian word for a sauce such as that in the Bolognese style (4) |
| CARTOIXA | Catalan word for a charterhouse such as that in the Carthusian monastery in Valldemossa, Mallorca (8) |
| PUTTY | Sealant for a window placed tentatively avoiding internal parts (5) |
| PIE | Filled pastry shell such as that in the stargazey style or one baked with a ceramic "bird" in its top crust (3) |
| TRICEPS | A three-headed muscle, such as that in the upper arm that extends or straightens the elbow joint (7) |
| TIE | A neck accessory such as that in the wide garish "kipper" style (3) |
| SINK | Kitchen or scullery basin such as that in the butler's or Belfast style (4) |
| DANES | Glass pieces for a window |
| LEDGE | Place for a window box |
| DRAPE | Loose-hanging covering for a window |
| SLATS | Wooden strips for a window blind |