| DEATHKNELL | Thing that heralds the end or ruin |
| FRI | Day that heralds the weekend for short |
| LYON | Scottish Herald - the end of all that |
| ASTERS | From the Latin for "stars", blooms such as purple daisy-like starworts florescent around Michaelmas that herald the approach of autumn (6) |
| FINIAL | From Latin for "end", an ornament or pommel in the form of an acorn, foliated fleur-de-lis, pine cone, poppy-head, spike etc at the end or top of a bench, curtain pole, gable or spire (6) |
| CURTAINS | Word for drapes or portieres; or, alluding to the closing or falling of these, the end, death or ruin (8) |
| PREFACE | Did the first fellow caper about by the end, or in the beginning? (7) |
| THRENODE | Writing about the end - or lament for the dead (8) |
| DETHRONE | Move the end, or remove one at the top? |
| EDGES | The parts along the end or sides of something |
| EDGE | The part along the end or side of something (4) |
| THROB | Beat that heralds rock or blues first of all |
| SEAWATER | A rise in the surface temperature of this, in the western Pacific, heralds the arrival of a new El N |
| SEPTIC | Implicit pessimism heralds the return of the tank (6) |
| OMEGA | Last Greek letter whose symbol in upper-case is used to denote ohm in physics or the end or limit of a set (5) |
| KNOBS | Rounded lumps or balls on the ends or on the surfaces of things (5) |
| ENTHRONED | Crowned at the end, or then, alternatively (9) |
| EARLIER | Hearing a falsehood, right at the end, or beforehand (7) |
| ABBEY | Live in a British monastery, in the end, or convent (5) |
| PALADIN | A loud noise from my friend heralds the arrival of that knight-errant (7) |