| CHEMISE | A woman's skirt, a smock or straight dress (7) |
| BEETLE | Framework worn to expand a woman's skirt (6) |
| BUSTLE | Framework worn to expand a woman's skirt (6) |
| TUTU | Half-tuck taken twice if it's to skirt a dancer (4) |
| SLOP | A loose cassock, gown, smock or tunic; or, from "cowpat", a muddy place or puddle; spilled, unappetising or waste liquid food; snowy slush; or, wishy-washy sentiment, aka gush (4) |
| MANKINI | Revealing outfit? Mini skirts a new look, ultimately (7) |
| PEAT | Cat, say, skirts a piece of partly decayed vegetation (4) |
| BLOTTO | Dumb lot touching skirts a bit tight (6) |
| SPLOTCH | Something caught by a smock |
| GUNSHOT | Shooters straight off the fire ___ or straight off the firing line? (7) |
| PLACKET | Old woman's skirt-pocket (7) |
| GEMSBOK | Largest of me three species of oryx, or straight-horned antelope, found on the plains of Africa; Oryx gazella (7) |
| UPRIGHT | Erect or straight (7) |
| SHOOTER | Word with square or straight |
| PATHAND | Full house or straight, say |
| EVENOUT | Make level or straight (4,3) |
| LABCOAT | Left first three letters and a ring at a medical smock (3,4) |
| OVERALL | More than a couple of lines on smock (7) |
| OCTAGON | Figure a little smock's labelled (7) |
| DENISON | Military smock favoured by the Parachute Regiment during World War II (7) |