| SCARECROW | A device to frighten birds from crops, usually a figure of a man dressed in ragged clothes (9) |
| TATTERDEMALION | One dressed in ragged clothes |
| NORMA | Either a man dressed up outside or a woman (5) |
| MAIZE | Cereal crop usually known as corn in North America |
| NORTHPOLE | Home of the man dressed in hearts or diamonds? (5,4) |
| REFIT | New look? Man dressed in black often needs it |
| ALEC | Smart man dressed in lace |
| PARACHUTE | A device to retard the fall of a person or package from an aircraft (9) |
| BILGEPUMP | A device to remove water from the lowest internal part of the hull in boats and ships (5,4) |
| PHANTASMA | Fantastic figure of a man Pat has conjured up (9) |
| ICEANCHOR | A device to attach a ship to a floe (3,6) |
| ALIGNMENT | Gentil man, dressed or dressing? (9) |
| GEOLOCATE | Track a device to EEC gaol, perhaps (9) |
| ATLAS | Word for a book of maps that takes its name from the Greek Titan depicted on title pages of early such volumes; or, a figure of a man serving as an architectural column (5) |
| INDEX | Alphabetical list of subjects at the end of a book; the gnomon of a sundial; or, a figure of a point |
| JACK | Figure of a man striking a bell on a clock; device for releasing one's foot from a boot; or, a leather pitcher (4) |
| JUMPINGJACK | A puppet-like toy figure of a man with limbs moved by a string; a leap in which one assumes a star-like configuration; or, a firework that erratically hops along the ground (7,4) |
| SCARECROWS | Depicted in stories by Barbara Euphan Todd, effigies set up in fields to deter birds from crops (10) |
| ASTERISK | A figure of a star used in writing and printing, often to indicate omission of words or letters (8) |
| AGNUSDEI | A figure of a lamb emblematic of Christ, bearing the banner of the cross |