| SHEETS | Trays upon which to bake biscuits; sails; panes of stamps; folios; or, wide expanses of ice, clouds or rain (6) |
| OFFFORM | Describing indifferent quality of folios or manuscripts, initially (3,4) |
| OORT | Dutch astronomer with an eponymous ice cloud |
| SHEET | Another word for a pane of stamps; or, a single piece of writing paper (5) |
| VERSO | From "turned leaf", the back of a folio or sheet; a left-hand page of an open book; or, the rear of something, such as a coin, medal or painting (5) |
| BROAD | One of Norfolk's wide expanses of water (5) |
| SANGFROID | Celebrated folio or revolutionary papers being collected |
| TRAY | A thin insert for a layer of chocolates in a box, a toaster's shallow crumb drawer, a metal sheet on which to bake biscuits or a silver salver for drinks, each named for their likeness to a treen boar |
| OVENS | Cast-iron cooking pots; chambers in which to bake biscuits, bread, buns etc; kilns; or, extremely hot places (5) |
| PATTYPAN | Central to a Beatrix Potter tale, a dish or tin in which to bake a little pie or cake; or, a miniature scalloped cymling squash, resembling this (8) |
| QUARRELS | Word for squabbles or wrangles that also refers to square things, including panes of glass, tiles or arrowheads for the bolts of arbalests/crossbows (8) |
| OVEN | Aga or cooker compartment in which to bake or roast food (4) |
| BUTTER | Word, from "cow cheese", for the pale-yellow churned cream with which to bake a cake, make a roux or veritably spread on one's crumpets or toast with honey from the bees (6) |
| SASH | One of a pair of sliding frames containing a pane of glass for a window of the same name (4) |
| SEA | Wide expanse of water |
| TRACT | Wide expanse of land |
| OCEAN | Wide expanse of corn extending across Nebraska, primarily |
| OVERHILLANDDALE | Across a wide expanse of rural land |
| OPENSEA | Wide expanse of water (4,3) |
| MOORLAND | Old Roman abandoned in wide expanse of uncultivated ground (8) |