| DOUBLEFRONTED | (Of a house) having main-room windows on both sides of the main door |
| VESTIBULE | Small entrance hall or anteroom just inside the main door of a building (9) |
| FISHERMAN | One having main source of income perhaps (9) |
| EFFETE | Decadent and effeminate, having main novel banned (6) |
| STOUPS | Holy water fonts near main doors of churches; or, a dialect word for beakers, buckets, flagons or posts (6) |
| HALL | The main room in a great house; a lobby; a college canteen, hence the meal eaten; or, a country manor (4) |
| HAUL | Loot from robbery found in the main room of a great house they say (4) |
| POPUP | Small window that appears on top of the existing windows on a computer screen (3-2) |
| LOINS | Parts of the body on both sides of the spine between the false ribs and the hipbones |
| GASEOUS | Otherwise ages in house having the characteristics of a fuel |
| TILED | Arranged windows on a screen with a glazed look (5) |
| ONEUPONEDOWN | Description of a house with single lower and upper main rooms |
| SETTEE | Something to do of course before hitting the ball can be seen through sitting room window (6) |
| SILLYQUESTION | "Should this potted plant go in the dining room window or the bedroom window?," e.g. |
| INTHESOUP | Bad pint outside free house having a lot of problems (2,3,4) |
| BRICKSANDMORTAR | Those in The House having a physical, business-like presence (6,3,6) |
| APHORISM | Saw a head of state outside house, having gentleman around |
| STRIKINGHOME | Stopping work at the house having the intended effect (8,4) |
| TINTED | Like the windows on the president's limo |
| FENESTRATE | With windows on low country right inside the landed property (10) |