| MARGUERITE | Single chrysanthemum especially the ox-eye daisy (10) |
| CHRYSANTHEMUM | Showy flower such as the ox-eye daisy (13) |
| WHITEHEAD | A perennial composite herb, also called the ox-eye daisy (9) |
| XEROX | Print and digital products and services, as in the mixer ox-eye daisy! (5) |
| TELEKIA | Genus of yellow ox-eye daisy - like tea variety (7) |
| DAISY | With an English species, the ox-eye, marguerite and gerbera, a wild flower used to make chains and crowns, said to symbolise innocence, purity and new beginnings (5) |
| OXEYEDAISY | Wild chrysanthemum |
| NORTH | In one direction heliopsis is the ___ American ox-eye, and Narcissus 'Queen of the ___' is a small-cupped daffodil (5) |
| FABLE | Aesop's The Tortoise And The Hare or The Frog And The Ox (5) |
| GOWAN | Thought to be related to Old English for "marigold", Scottish dialect for a golden, white or yellow field flower, such as a daisy or an ox-eye (5) |
| BELLIS | Genus of the "pretty, beautiful" marguerite- or ox-eye-like English lawn daisies symbolic of purity and joy (6) |
| OVAL | Ox-eye window shape |
| FLOWER | Ox-eye, perhaps following cow (6) |
| MOONDAISY | Another name for ox-eye (4,5) |
| STRAYBULLET | The cat and the ox take the alien to be a lethal hazard (5,6) |
| AESOP | "The Frog and the Ox" writer |
| MULE | Stable companion of the ox and the ass, perhaps (4) |
| AXIOM | Saw the aim to put the ox back inside (5) |
| ENTWISTLE | Bassist with The Who, nicknamed The Ox (9) |
| HARDY | Author of the Wessex novels and the Christmas poem The Oxen (5) |