| SCREENED | Something (unsightly, perhaps) hidden by a fence or hedge (8) |
| ENCLOSURE | Area of land surrounded by a fence or wall (9) |
| SMEUSE | A dialect word, combining the Old French for "secret hiding place" and "smoot", meaning a small hole, for a gap in a fence or hedge for the passing of a rabbit or a hare (6) |
| PROPERTYLINE | Place for a fence or hedge, perhaps |
| CONTAINER | Receptacle (a tin, perhaps) hidden by wrinkled crone (9) |
| LINEAGE | Stock of unopened Merlot perhaps hidden by beer, mostly (7) |
| PALISADE | A fence or wall of wooden stakes forming a defensive barrier (8) |
| ROSEBUSH | Floribunda or other prickly thorny garden perennial with fragrant blush, crimson or pink velvety blooms abounding in the form of a shrubby plant or hedge rather than as a rambler (8) |
| COMPOUND | An open area enclosed by a fence, e.g. around a factory (8) |
| STALWART | Strong and brave and the last to be disturbed by something unsightly (8) |
| RAILINGS | Metal bars acting as a fence or boundary |
| RECEIVED | Taken in by a fence? (8) |
| NANNYCAM | Device hidden by a concerned parent |
| PALE | An adjective meaning feeble, light in colour, peaky, wan, washed-out or whitish; or, as a noun, a vertical stripe on a shield; a wooden stake forming a fence; or, a conceptual boundary (4) |
| SLAT | Dialect for a roofing tile; Irish for a spent salmon; or, a louvre, spline or strip, as in a fence or a Venetian blind (4) |
| GATE | Type of door in a fence or a hedge; or, a passage into a city (4) |
| GAP | An opening in a fence or a pair of curtains, e.g.; a break in continuity; a col; or, a space in one's diary (3) |
| ELECTRIC | Word with fence or blanket |
| ENFORCES | Broken fences or implements (8) |
| PANEL | Section of a vehicle's bodywork; compartment of a fence; or, a group of interviewers or jurors (5) |