| CORTEGE | Train of attendants or a funeral procession |
| STEWARD | Official in charge of a match or race; a male flight attendant; or, a person employed to look after a large house, farm or estate (7) |
| KNELL | Solemn ringing of bells, particularly to mark a death or a funeral |
| ONCEINALIFETIME | Frequency with which you have a christening or a funeral? (4,2,1,8) |
| SUITE | Word for a following, sequence, set, succession or train of attendants, dance tunes, furniture, hotel rooms, minerals, musical pieces or rocks (5) |
| RETINUE | Train of attendants to a dignitary or celebrity (7) |
| ESCORT | Part of a funeral procession |
| DEADMARCH | Music suitable for a funeral procession (4,5) |
| HEARSE | First vehicle in a funeral procession |
| LIVERY | Uniform of the Queen's footmen, pageboys and other attendants, or that of members of any of the Worshipful Companies of London (6) |
| RETINUES | Trains of attendants |
| MARSHAL | Word for an ostler or a king's farrier originally, later an officer in a royal household; a prison-keeper; or, a proctor's attendant or "bulldog" at Oxford University (7) |
| STEWARDS | Managers of large estates, farms or manors; officers of royal households; race marshals; flight attendants; or, college caterers (8) |
| YEOMAN | Attendant or lesser official in a royal or noble household (6) |
| ORDERLIES | Hospital attendants or soldiers working for officers (9) |
| OUTRIDERS | Carriage attendants or winning jockeys? (9) |
| SARTRE | Philosopher whose 1980 funeral procession was attended by tens of thousands of Parisians |
| VARLET | In olden days. a knight's attendant or page (6) |
| ENTOURAGE | A group of attendants surrounding an important person; retinue (9) |
| SUITES | Sets of furniture for groups of attendants |