| RICEPAPER | Wrongly price pear leaves of a sort (4,5) |
| RECIPE | Wrongly price a quarter the ingredients for the dish (6) |
| FILCH | Take rotten half-price pear away |
| SISALHEMP | Fibre made from the leaves of a plant native to Mexico (5,4) |
| HEAD | Top of a page; upper end of a bed; source of a river; or, the leaves of a cabbage or lettuce collectively (4) |
| PAGE | One side of one of the leaves of a book or newspaper (4) |
| TEA | With around 3,000 varieties including Earl Grey, English breakfast and Darjeeling, a beverage derived from the leaves of a species of camellia (3) |
| TOBACCO | Preparation of the nicotine-rich leaves of a plant of the nightshade family (7) |
| PETAL | Any of the leaves of a corolla |
| COCA | Leaves of a South American shrub, a chewed stimulant (4) |
| ALOE | --- vera, a juice obtained from the leaves of a liliaceous plant (4) |
| HENNA | A reddish dye, obtained from the powdered leaves of a tropical shrub, used to colour the hair and decorate the body (5) |
| ALOEVERA | A juice obtained from the leaves of a succulent, used as an emollient in skin and hair preparations (4,4) |
| STEVIA | Calorie- free sugar substitute obtained from the leaves of a South American plant of the family Asteraceae ( composites) ( 6) |
| RAFFIA | A ribbon-like fibre obtained from the leaves of a palm, used in weaving mats and baskets (6) |
| THUMB | A handy thing it is to go through the leaves of a book (5) |
| TUCUM | A fine, strong fibre obtained from the young leaves of a Brazilian palm. (5) |
| SHAW | Scottish word for the leaves of a potato or turnip plant; or, a copse, small wood or thicket (4) |
| SEPAL | One of the outer leaves of a flower protecting the developing bud (5) |
| SENNA | Drug from the leaves of a plant |