| ANTIHISTAMINE | Treatment of this inanimate form |
| DEMENTIA | Time and energy primarily needed for treatment of this condition (8) |
| NATIVEAMERICAN | Carve inanimate form of inhabitant (6,8) |
| STILLLIFE | Description of a painting or drawing of inanimate objects, such as Caravaggio's Basket of Fruit or Braque's Violin and Candlestick (5,4) |
| PATHETICFALLACY | Attribution of emotions to inanimate things, especially around this time of year |
| VEGETABLE | Word that derives from "animated, enliven, excite", yet is used to describe an inanimate object in the form of a cabbage, carrot, cauliflower, courgette, cucumber or other edible part of a plant (9) |
| ITSELF | Reflexive form of an inanimate third person pronoun (6) |
| CHIA | Inanimate sort of pet |
| NEUTER | Usual gender of inanimate objects |
| ABIOTIC | Inanimate cat I transported about ? story of my life! |
| DEATH | Final state of inanimate inside athletic event (5) |
| STILL | - life, painting of inanimate objects (5) |
| STILLLIFES | Pictures of inanimate objects (5,5) |
| LIBRA | The only inanimate sign of the zodiac |
| ORPHEUS | Mythological Greek poet who could move inanimate objects and charm wild beasts with the music of his |
| AUTOMATON | First of ugli fruit fed to an inanimate machine (9) |
| THING | An inanimate object could have a hint of gravity (5) |
| LIFE | Still -; with breakfast piece examples by Pieter Claesz, Willem Claesz. Heda and Georg Flegel, a painting of inanimate objects such as flowers and fruit (4) |
| WIL | What is the name of Tom Hanks' inanimate friend in Cast Away? (6) |
| PATHETIC | The attribution of human feelings and responses to inanimate things or animals, _ fallacy (8) |