| NORWEGIANWOOD | Words preceding the parenthetical (This Bird Has Flown) in a 1965 Beatles song title: 2 wds. |
| TURNTURNTURN | Words preceding the parenthetical (To Everything There Is a Season) in a 1965 Byrds song title: 3 wds. |
| MICHELLE | Who is praised in French in a 1965 Beatles song? (8) |
| IDO | One-fifth of an ABBA song title (2 wds.) |
| LIKEA | Words before Virgin and Prayer in Madonna song titles: 2 wds. |
| TOPOF | Words preceding the line, the heap or the morning |
| NORWEGIAN | --------- Wood (This Bird Has Flown), The Beatles song from their 1965 album Rubber Soul (9) |
| WOOD | Song from the Beatles' 1965 album Rubber Soul, Norwegian _ (This Bird Has Flown) (4) |
| WHO | Word preceding the punch line of a knock-knock joke |
| SATISFACTION | Word following the parenthetical (I Can't Get No) in a 1965 Rolling Stones song title |
| RITA | The name of the parking attendant in a Beatles song title (4) |
| LEFTMOSTLETTERS | What the parenthetical numbers tell you to use in a novel way |
| WHITESTORK | This bird has long been a symbol of fertility in Europe. Parents used to tell their children that new babies were brought by this bird. |
| ARCTICTERN | This bird has a long, forked tail, short red legs, a pointed beak, and a covering of black feathers on its head. It migrates from the Arctic to Antarctica and back, which is distance of more than 32,0 |
| POLYGON | Figure the bird has flown, from the sound of it? |
| BRIDGET | The bird has flown, you understand from her (7) |
| DAYTRIPPER | 1965 Beatles song released as a double A-side with We Can Work It Out (10) |
| RHONDA | The "you" in "you caught my eye" in a 1965 #1 hit |
| ODDMANOUT | Method used to eliminate the parenthetical descriptions from the answers |
| FLOWN | Beatles song Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has ___) |