| PAMPASGRASS | Tall South American plant with long, sharp leaves, cultivated for its large, feathery flower plumes (6,5) |
| PAMPAS | Tall, South American grass cultivated for its large, feathery flower branches (6) |
| ASTILBE | Genus of plant with feathery flower plumes - it's able to vary (7) |
| YUCCA | Tropical American plant with long, pointed leaves (5) |
| GUNNERA | A South American plant with very large leaves that resembles rhubarb (7) |
| QUINOA | South American plant with seeds used as rice and leaves as spinach (6) |
| PINEAPPLES | Large juicy fruits with sharp leaves |
| NETTLE | Plant with sharp leaves |
| TARO | Tropical Asian plant with fleshy leaves cultivated for its large, edible rootstock (4) |
| LIATRIS | North American plants with long spikes of purplish flowers. (7) |
| PICTUREHAT | A lady's face-framing wide-brimmed flower-, plume- and ribbon-trimmed bonnet worthy of a Gainsborough-style portrait or Reynolds-esque painting, for example (7,3) |
| NEEDLEFISH | Slender swimmer with long, sharp jaws |
| EMU | Outback bird with long sharp claws |
| GAR | Fish with long, sharp teeth |
| COCAS | South American plants with psychoactive properties |
| BOA | Large, feathery scarf |
| CLOVER | Small plant with three-lobed leaves cultivated for fodder (6) |
| FESCUE | Grass with wide flat leaves cultivated in Europe and America for permanent pasture and hay and for lawns. |
| MAIKOA | South American plant cultivated for its large fragrant trumpet-shaped flowers. |
| SISAL | A Mexican agave plant cultivated for its large fleshy leaves, which yield a stiff fibre used for making rope |