| SEAFRET | A name for a misty fog rolling inland from an ocean (3,4) |
| HAZE | Misty fog |
| COTTAGE | Word, derived from a medieval term for a one-roomed peasant dwelling or a name for a dove-house, for a small country dwelling (7) |
| BECCLES | Suffolk market town on the River Waveney, inland from Lowestoft (7) |
| CHARLIE | A code word; a name for a fox; or, a Vandyke-like beard (7) |
| FOGLAMP | Aid on a misty night |
| FOGHORN | Blast heard in a misty harbour |
| STADIUM | A name for a sports or concert venue, derived from a Greek word meaning the length of 600 feet (7) |
| MAMILLA | Diminutive form of the Latin word for "breast", a name for a nipple in English |
| REYNARD | A name for a fox in European folklore (7) |
| ANATOLE | As a name for a man, "Leo" is odd (7) |
| HORATIO | Nelson had such a name for a style of hair, too |
| MAHATMA | In Hinduism, a name for a Brahmin sage meaning Great Soul (7) |
| CANASTA | Actors adopt a name for a game (7) |
| SPANIEL | Talk about a name for a dog (7) |
| THERESA | Yonder's a name for a woman (7) |
| CRIMEAN | Atrocity, a name for a war |
| FADE | Word, with an aptly murky, unclear or vague past, for brume, cloudiness, a misty veil or other atmospheric obscurity; thus, a blurred memory, the mind's fog, where clarity fades or a similar state sug |
| SHARKSQUEAK | Sound from an ocean predator imitating a mouse? |
| SEABREEZE | A gentle coastal zephyr, blowing inland from the ocean; or, a cocktail of vodka mixed with the juice of cranberries and grapefruit (3,6) |