| DENEB | Brightest star of the constellation Cygnus; from Arabic, 'tail' (i.e. of the 'swan') (5) |
| FOMALHAUT | Brightest star of the constellation Piscis Austrinus; Arabic, 'mouth of the fish' (9) |
| ASTAIRE | A star, i.e., of movies |
| SIAMESE | Like a mess, i.e., of cats |
| REGULUS | Brightest star of the constellation Leo, named from Latin word for little king (7) |
| ALDEBARAN | The brightest star of the constellation Taurus |
| ALGOL | Multiple star considered the second-brightest of the constellation Perseus, known as the Demon Star (5) |
| WHITE | Colour of the cue ball in snooker, pool and billiards; or, the author of Charlottes Web and The Trumpet of the Swan (5) |
| RIGEL | Beta Orionis, star at the bottom right of the constellation of Orion (5) |
| HYDRA | Largest of the constellations, whose brightest star is Alphard (Arabic, 'the solitary one') (5) |
| INDIS | Containing the star known as the Persian, one of the constellations charted in Bayer's Uranometria by means of copperplate engraving (5) |
| PERTH | Which Australian city lies along the estuary of the Swan River? (5) |
| DHABI | Largest of the seven countries making up the United Arab Emirates; from Arabic, 'father of gazelle' (3,5) |
| CETUS | Large southern constellation (the Whale) whose brightest star is Diphda (from Arabic, 'frog') (5) |
| EASEL | Wooden stand for a canvas, used as the symbol of the constellation Pictor (5) |
| VIRGO | Second-largest of the constellations, on the celestial equator south of Hydra (5) |
| ALPHA | The first or brightest star of a constellation (5) |
| ABUNA | Title given to the Patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox church; from Arabic, 'our father' (5) |
| IFTAR | Meal eaten by Muslims after sunset each day of Ramadan; from Arabic, 'breaking of the fast' (5) |
| LIBRA | Part of Bengali bragged of the constellation (5) |