| KNOT | A huddled group; an elaborate maze-like flower-bed; dialect for a hill; or, a bind such as a clove hitch, Englishman's tie, fisherman's bend, sheepshank or Turk's head (4) |
| CLOUD | Word for a hill or a rock first, now a cirrus or any other such visible mass of condensed fog floating in the air (5) |
| PIKE | Lakeland dialect for a hill or fell with a pointed peak (4) |
| COPPIN | Dialect for the crest or top of a hill; or, a conical mass of thread on a spindle, possibly tump-shaped (6) |
| KIP | Unit of weight equal to 1000lb; 100 Laotian at; Scottish dialect for a pointed hill; or, a slang word for a bed, nap or lodging house (3) |
| CROW | The forehead; the countenance or expression of the face; the peak of a hill; or, a ship's gangway (4) |
| STOCK | Pastel pink, lilac, white or cream flower with a clove-like spicy scent, Matthiola incana; or, an equestrian's cravat (5) |
| KNOP | An archaic or dialect word for a hill-crest, hillock or protuberance (4) |
| RANGE | Series of mountains or hills; or, a type of stove such as an Aga (5) |
| PINK | Call of a chaffinch; a clove-scented flower related to sweet william, carnation and red campion; or, the colour of the Leander Club's hippopotamus logo (4) |
| MASSES | "Huddled" group in an inscription on the Statue of Liberty |
| POMANDER | From the French meaning "apple of amber", a clove-studded orange or a perforated orb containing aromatic substances (8) |
| KNAP | Dialect word for a hill-crest (4) |
| TUNNEL | An artificial underground passage through a hill or under a road |
| BEACON | A signal fire or light on a hill or tower (6) |
| MESA | Flat hill, or a city near Phoenix |
| BORGES | Argentinian writer, known for his maze-like stories (6) |
| FIRSTGEAR | Pine's great new selection for a hill climber (5,4) |
| LOWGEAR | Shifting choice for a hill |
| PANEL | Part of a group, an election committee (5) |