| ARMIGERO | Shakespearean word for a person entitled to a coat of arms (8) |
| HERALDIC | Pertaining to a coat of arms (8) |
| MANIFOLD | Various kinds of person entitled to a pension (8) |
| LEGATEE | Two forms of support keeping a person entitled to benefit |
| OAP | Person entitled to a bus pass (inits)(3) |
| HOOD | Head covering attached to a coat |
| TENEBRIS | From "darkness, gloom", word for a person who lurks in the dark, aka a night prowler; a night spirit; or, a genus of darkling beetle, named for its nocturnal nyctophiliac habits (8) |
| SPINNER | A person who twists fibres into yarns; a Shakespearean word for a spider; a revolving device used as an alternative to a die in board games; or, a Jamaican dumpling (7) |
| RINGLETS | Shakespearean word for circle-dances performed by fairies; butterflies with chocolate-brown wings; or, corkscrew-shaped curls (8) |
| WAYFARER | Literary word for a person who journeys or travels on foot; or, a classic style of Ray-Ban sunglasses (8) |
| VIGNERON | French word for a person who cultivates vines/grapes for wine (8) |
| PROMISEE | Concert I watch as person entitled to expect something |
| LIFEPEER | One entitled to a seat for the rest of his days (4,4) |
| MISNOMER | Wrong or unsuitable word for a person or thing (8) |
| NICKNAME | Another word for a person's sobriquet or cognomen (8) |
| EMINENCE | The cardinal is entitled to a rise (8) |
| ANOREXIC | This word, for a person suffering appetite loss and shedding half their body weight, was first used |
| UNCLETOM | Slave was entitled to a cabin |
| RACK | Toast-holder; Shakespearean word for a flying cloud; set of antlers; or, a horse's "single-foot" gait (4) |
| TORCHER | Shakespearean word for a light-giver (7) |