| HITPARADE | A blow on the promenade or Top of the Pops? (3,6) |
| COAT | A fleece, pelage or pelt; or, any other outer covering, such as an application of paint/varnish, blanket of dust, husk of a seed, jacket, layer of a bulb or top of a suit of armour (4) |
| TRAP | Catch a blow on the back of the foot (4) |
| CANOPY | Part on the parachute; or, Top of the trees |
| ENDORSE | Sign on the bottom or top of the section (7) |
| STARRYEYED | Out of touch with reality when reacting to a blow on the head? (6-4) |
| RAP | A blow on the knuckles is what one doesn't care to give (3) |
| CUFF | A blow on the wrist? (4) |
| NOSER | An inquisitive person may get a blow on the hooter (5) |
| BANG | A blow on the head (4) |
| RIGHT | A blow on the side (5) |
| SEABREEZE | Main task that's easy comes as a blow on the coast |
| SOCK | A blow on the foot (4) |
| COPPIN | Dialect for the crest or top of a hill; or, a conical mass of thread on a spindle, possibly tump-shaped (6) |
| SWIPE | A blow on the side? |
| FRONTIER | Is on the promenade. That's right on the border (8) |
| FINIAL | From Latin for "end", an ornament or pommel in the form of an acorn, foliated fleur-de-lis, pine cone, poppy-head, spike etc at the end or top of a bench, curtain pole, gable or spire (6) |
| ESPLANADE | A level space separating a citadel from a town; or, a flat promenade or public walk, typically by the sea (9) |
| FRONT | Word for a person's forehead or face originally, later a book's cover, a shirt's dicky, a shop's facade, a seaside promenade or any other forepart (5) |
| CREST | The top of a wave or top of a mountain (5) |