| FERTILE | Word with crescent or imagination (7) |
| MOON | Word with crescent or blue |
| PROSAIC | Lacking wit or imagination, dull (7) |
| CARAWAY | Herb in the parsley family with crescent-shaped seed-like fruits used in medieval cookery for comfits and "marchpanes" (7) |
| FLIGHT | Word for a bird or plane's airborne journey; a soaring of swallows or other avians; the trajectory of an arrow or dart; a wandering of fancy or imagination; or, an act of fleeing (6) |
| STOLID | Impassive or showing little emotion or imagination (6) |
| LIRAS | Coins with flags with crescents |
| HORN | A musical wind instrument fashioned from brass or a conch; an antenna of a beetle; an antler of a deer; a tentacle of a snail; a tip of a crescent; or, a symbol of a cuckold (4) |
| PHASE | Crescent or new moon |
| CREATE | To evolve from one's own thought or imagination. (6) |
| EARTHBOUND | Lacking wit or imagination |
| PROSY | Lacking wit or imagination |
| UNPOETIC | Lacking wit or imagination |
| MINDSEYE | Visual memory or imagination (5,3) |
| REDCROSS | Body set up to treat the wounded in war and protect non-combatants; its symbol displayed on a white background can also be a crescent or Star of David (3,5) |
| ROLLS | Crescents or kaisers |
| LUNETTE | Literally meaning "little moon", a crescent-shaped architectural recess occupied by a painting, window or relief sculpture; or, an old word for a half horseshoe (7) |
| FLEURON | Flower-like ornament employed in Gothic architecture or found at the centre of the face of a Corinthian abacus; or, a puff pastry garnish in the form of a crescent moon (7) |
| CENTRIC | Relating to the middle crescent Richard accepted (7) |
| NEWMOON | Was familiar with, reportedly, parameters of Mornington Crescent (3,4) |