| TILLAGE | Cultivation of land for raising crops (7) |
| TILLING | Preparation and cultivation of land for crops (7) |
| ARABLE | Suitable for raising crops (6) |
| ORCHARD | Nothing difficult about raising crops in the front garden |
| TRACTOR | Big plot of land for either partner advertised in the Farmers Journal perhaps (7) |
| TERRACE | Convert home to church in stretch of land for row of houses |
| ACREAGE | A large area of land, for good measure, will grow old (7) |
| TILTH | Cultivation of land is hard at bottom of incline |
| AGRONOMY | Science of crop production, soil management and cultivation of land (8) |
| AGRARIAN | Of a society, relating to the cultivation of land (8) |
| HERBARY | Old word for a type of physic garden for the cultivation of plants such as rosemary, lemon balm, thyme, hyssop and camomile (7) |
| FARM | From a Latin word originally used to denote a tax or rent, a tract of land for the cultivation of crops or rearing of livestock, including its associated barns and homestead (4) |
| INDIA | At home, aid cultivation of land (5) |
| GRAPERY | Word for a building, estate, place or vineyard for the cultivation of the fruits known in French as raisins (7) |
| FERNERY | Garden for the cultivation of the plants studied in pteridology (7) |
| LOTHIAN | Part of Scotland, area into cultivation of thistle now (4,7) |
| TURNIPS | The second Viscount Townshend of Raynham Hall famously advocated the large-scale cultivation of these vegetables (7) |
| RETREAT | With an example at Sissinghurst Castle Garden, an orchard for the cultivation of hazels and other such kernel-bearing shrubs and trees (7) |
| UNDERGO | Endure cultivation of English ground (7) |
| ELEVATE | Promote cultivation of vegetable Great Britain's neglected (7) |