| WEAR | ___ and 54-Down (result of everyday use) |
| THIRDPARTY | Neither Republican nor Democrat (after 23-Across and 54-Down) |
| ENTERPRISE | (& 4-down,11-down) Result of a workplace's collective negotiation for improved conditions (10,10,9) |
| ATOMIC | With 48-Down, result of nuclear |
| TAILS | Heads-down result |
| ARCHAIC | Description of an old-fashioned word that is no longer in everyday use, though sometimes used to convey a flavour of antiquity (7) |
| PRACTICAL | Sort of examination that's suitable for everyday use (9) |
| WEARANDTEAR | Damage from everyday use |
| OUTS | "Three up, three down" results |
| MOUSETRAP | Word used to describe cheese for everyday use; or, a miniature cage for catching a rodent (9) |
| STEEN | Dutch artist noted for his depictions of everyday 17th-century life in paintings such as Rhetoricians at a Window, Beware of Luxury, The Effects of Intemperance, The Dancing Couple and The Merry Famil |
| EDWARDHOPPER | This American painter created realistic depictions of everyday urban scenes that shock the viewer into recognition of the strangeness of familiar surroundings. His painting entitled Chop Suey (1929) s |
| CORNERSHOP | A type of convenience store, grocer, minimart, newsagent, off-licence or other emporium of everyday goods, characteristically situated at the end of a local road or a junction in a residential area (6 |
| VERISM | Use of everyday events in opera |
| VERISMO | Use of everyday life in art |
| IMPONDERABLES | David Feldman's series of books about trivial mysteries of everyday life |
| HERETO | - - - stay, accepted and part of everyday life (4,2) |
| ROCKWELL | Norman ---, US artist and illustrator noted for his depictions of everyday life |
| ETHNOMETHODOLOGY | Study of communication in the language of everyday conversation |
| EINSTEIN | Physicist who said "All of science is nothing more than the refinement of everyday thinking" |