| GYMNOSPERM | Seed-bearing plant such as a conifer (10) |
| ORNAMENTAL | A plant, such as a rose, grown for its beauty rather than utility (10) |
| OVULE | Small body in a seed-bearing plant that contains an egg cell and develops into a seed after fertilisation (5) |
| COTYLEDON | Simple embryonic leaf in a seed-bearing plant |
| CARAWAY | Vehicle off to get seed-bearing plant (7) |
| PISTIL | Seed-bearing plant organ |
| HERBAL | Like seed-bearing plants a woman's dog brought back |
| TURPENTINE | Trapped in Italian city bearing plant oil (10) |
| SPERMATOPHYTE | Seed-bearing plant |
| HERB | Non-woody seed-bearing plant that dies down to the ground after flowering |
| INDIANHEMP | North American fiber-bearing plant that may be mistaken for an Asian form of cannabis |
| COTTONBOLL | Rounded seed-bearing capsule |
| GRAPEVINES | Fruit-bearing plants (5,5) |
| STANDARD | Song of established popularity; largest petal of a papilionaceous flower such as a sweet pea; or, an upright "lollipop-shaped" plant such as a topiary olive or bay tree (8) |
| CLIMBER | A boulderer or mountaineer; a plant such as a vine; or, a person intent upon social advancement (7) |
| RAMBLER | A rover or wayfarer who enjoys long walks in the countryside; a climbing or trailing plant, such as a multiflora rose with clusters of small fragrant blooms; or, a babbler, lacking organisation in spe |
| PULSE | Edible seed of a leguminous plant such as a chickpea, lentil, bean etc. (5) |
| FROND | Large divided leaf of a flowerless plant such as a fern, attached to the main stem by a stipe (5) |
| WRAP | Fold or wind a covering around a tender plant (such as a palm or banana) at this time of year, to protect from the cold (4) |
| CROP | A cultivated plant, such as a cereal, fruit or vegetable, grown commercially on a large scale; or, the season's yield of said produce (4) |