| COXSORANGE | Variety of eating apple with sweet flesh and a redtinged green skin (4,6,6) |
| PIPPIN | Variety of eating apple with sweet flesh and a redtinged green skin (4,6,6) |
| MELON | Large fruit that grows on a vine and has juicy sweet flesh and a hard rind (5) |
| STURMER | Variety of eating apple with a pale green skin (7) |
| FUJI | Dessert apple variety with crisp, sweet flesh and an orange flush to the skin - named after the Mount (4) |
| HONEYDEWMELON | Large tropical fruit with sweet flesh (8,5) |
| SUNSET | Day's end and a popular 'Cox'-like variety of eating apple (6) |
| GALA | Festival or jamboree; variety of eating apple; or, a swimming competition between clubs (4) |
| GOLDENDELICIOUS | Sweet eating apple with yellowish-green skin (6,9) |
| PACIFICROSE | Large variety of eating apple from New Zealand (7,4) |
| RUSSET | Variety of eating apple (6) |
| COX | Variety of eating apple |
| LICHEE | A small, rounded fruit with a sweet, white scented flesh and a rough skin (6) |
| DATE | Fruit of a type of palm, with sweet edible flesh and a single large woody seed (4) |
| BRAEBURN | Sweet, slightly spicy variety of New Zealand eating apple; a hybrid of a Lady Hamilton and a Granny Smith (8) |
| OGEN | A variety of small melon having a green skin and sweet, pale-green flesh (4) |
| MANGO | A sweet tropical fruit with orange-yellow flesh and a tough skin (5) |
| KIWIFRUIT | Chinese gooseberry with pale green flesh and a furry skin (4,5) |
| DESSERT | Sort of eating apple - a meal's last course? (7) |
| PIXIE | This cultivar of Stipa gigantea, and an eating apple, and a trailing clematis, is a supernatural being in folklore and children's stories! (5) |