| EIDERDUCK | ... and down from this bird (5,4) |
| MACAW | Many a bird call from this bird (5) |
| KINGFISHER | Loud shrieking comes from this bird (10) |
| MINIM | Note this! I'm up and down from the North (5) |
| DUMBWAITER | Rough wartime bud is up and down from the kitchen at party (4,6) |
| OVERARM | With hand brought forward and down from above shoulder level (7) |
| TUBBINESS | Raised objection to firm sacking us, needing to slim down from this state? |
| EIDER | Get down from this! |
| DUCK | Get down - from this? |
| EMCEE | *Kevin Hart stepped down from this role |
| OUTNUMBERED | Classic 5 down from this century (11) |
| NOTGOINGOUT | Classic 5 down from this century (3,5,3) |
| GUILLEMOT | This bird is the largest of the "auks" at about 45 cm long and 1 kg in weight. The female of this species lays her one egg on the ground, where both parents share incubation duties. They can dive in w |
| PARTRIDGE | This bird is any of many small game birds native to the Old World and belonging to the family Phasianidae. They are larger than quails, with stronger bills and feet. In Henry VI, Part 2 (act 3, scene |
| COCKROBIN | In the nursery rhyme, the sparrow admitted to using its bow and arrow to kill this bird (4,5) |
| BALDEAGLE | This bird may have numbered in the hundreds of thousands when it was declared the American national bird in 1782, but its numbers steadily declined over the next two centuries, owing primarily to huma |
| CORMORANT | This bird swims underwater and has been used by humans for fishing; its guano is also valued as a fertilizer. In Richard II (act 2, scene 1), John of Gaunt says, "He tires betimes that spurs too fast |
| NORWEGIAN | --------- Wood (This Bird Has Flown), The Beatles song from their 1965 album Rubber Soul (9) |
| GOOSESTEP | March could feature this bird before tons in September |
| LITTLEOWL | Almost too well-lit? That's inappropriate for this bird |