| VILLAGE | Settlement of size between hamlet and town; or, a Latin word meaning "country house" (7) |
| REGINA | Capital of Saskatchewan; or, a Latin word meaning "queen" (6) |
| MARE | Female of the horse, mule or zebra; or, a Latin word for sea, used to describe any one of the basalt plains on the Moon's surface (4) |
| LASAGNA | This word in English has somewhat complicated origins, though it comes by way of, in part, a Latin word meaning "chamber pot" and a Vulgar Latin word meaning "cooking pot," by which it evolved to an I |
| LENIENT | "Merciful" - based on a Latin word meaning to soothe |
| COUNTRY | Out of town or a totally different area (7) |
| CAPITAL | Chief town; or, a block letter (7) |
| GARNISH | Newfoundland town; or, a decorative food flair |
| ELASTIC | Able to be stretched without permanent alteration of size or shape |
| ETC | Abbreviation of a Latin word meaning "and the rest, and so on" (3) |
| FARM | From a Latin word originally used to denote a tax or rent, a tract of land for the cultivation of crops or rearing of livestock, including its associated barns and homestead (4) |
| OCTAVOS | Book sizes between quarto and duodecimo |
| CUTTER | A ship's jollyboat-like service vessel; a tailor who scissors cloth; a utensil for pressing out rounds of biscuit dough; or, a pig of a size between baconer and porker (6) |
| GRADATE | Arrange in steps of size |
| PARSNIPS | Related to a Latin word meaning "dig and trench the ground", carrot-, salsify- or skirret-like root vegetables, often pureed for soup or roasted (8) |
| APRIL | From a Latin word meaning "to open", thought to allude to buds and flowers opening in spring, the fourth month of the year and the one in which Cuckoo Day falls (5) |
| VILLAGER | Inhabitant of a place in size between a hamlet and a town (8) |
| FORDWICH | Ontario town, or a Taurus between a Mustang and a Cougar? |
| TEMPO | This word means in Italian "rate of speed," in reference to music. The Italian, in turn, is derived from a Latin word meaning "time." The first known use is c. 1724. |
| SINUS | Air-filled skull cavity, a Latin word meaning "curve" or "pocket" |