| FINISH | Finale or end (6) |
| ENDING | Finale or termination (6) |
| CODA | From Latin for "tail", the clinching passage of a movement or piece; a ballet finale; or, a concluding event, remark, section etc generally (4) |
| OBJECT | Tangible item, such as one forming a collection; target, goal or end purpose; focus of one's feelings; or, a, deplorable spectacle (6) |
| STIFLE | To quell, crush, or end by force. (6) |
| FINITE | Having a limit or end (6) |
| GAMESEVEN | Playoff series finale ... or an apt title for this puzzle considering the number and length of its t |
| ENCODE | ... hence, having no beginning or end, poem causes scramble (6) |
| IGNORE | Set aside part of a road-sign, or end up lost (6) |
| POCKET | An opening at the side or end of a snooker table (6) |
| FINIAL | In architecture, a terminal ornament marking the apex, corner or "end" of a curtain rod, gable, spire etc, often in foliated fleur-de-lis form (6) |
| ACCORD | A pair of chapters or end of strand in official treaty (6) |
| CREWEL | Yarn sailors tell with no beginning or end |
| GALORE | Lag about, or end early in large numbers |
| INTEND | Switch company, having no start or end plan |
| ETERNE | Without beginning or end, archaically |
| CATTLE | Type of beast that each long answer starts or ends in? |
| TAILPIECE | Decorative design at the foot of a page or end of a chapter; any one of Thomas Bewick's woodblock engravings; or, an ebony or rosewood strip anchoring a violin's strings (9) |
| AIM | Goal or end or objective |
| SIGNATURETUNE | Music played at the beginning or end of a TV or radio programme (9,4) |