| STOT | Dialect word for a bullock or steer (4) |
| STEER | Name an alternative word for a bullock (5) |
| BUGLE | Brass wind instrument named from the Latin-derived Old French word for a bullock (5) |
| HOLT | Term for a fortress/keep originally, later a dialect word for a grasp or grip; an otter's riverbank couch, den or lair; a refuge; or, from "twig", a copse, orchard, wood or wooded hill (4) |
| WICK | Old or dialect word for a creek, farm, hamlet or village; or, a cord that supplies fuel to a candle or oil lamp's flame by capillary action (4) |
| BUSS | An archaic or dialect word for a passionate kiss or loud playful smacker; or, a bluff-bowed Dutch boat for herring or mackerel fishing (4) |
| SHAW | An old or dialect word for a copse, thicket or woodland; Scots for the leafy top of a potato/turnip; or, an assumed name of Lawrence of Arabia (4) |
| KEMP | An old dialect word for a contest in reaping or other work; a champion; or, from "whisker, moustache", a coarse dye-resistant fibre or strand in wool (4) |
| KNOP | An archaic or dialect word for a hill-crest, hillock or protuberance (4) |
| VARE | Dialect word for a weasel; or, from "forked stick", a wand of authority (4) |
| GRIG | Dialect word for a cricket or grasshopper (4) |
| SNOB | Dialect word for a cobbler or shoemaker (4) |
| REEN | Dialect word for a ditch or watercourse (4) |
| MUSS | Dialect word for a confused tussle, disagreeable muddle, dishevelled ruffle or untidy rumple (4) |
| NEEP | Dialect word for a turnip (4) |
| KNAP | Dialect word for a hill-crest (4) |
| OARS | Implements used to propel or steer a boat (4) |
| BEEF | Full-grown ox, cow, bull or steer bred and fattened for meat |
| SLUR | Dialect word for thin mud, thus a sullying or staining smear made in an act of mudslinging; or, a smirch (4) |
| HORN | With which a bullock may gore one ? (4) |