| WYCHELM | First uses of wood - yew, cedar, hickory, elder, larch and maple tree (4-3) |
| CLOGDANCE | Low-level use of wood to block routine (4,5) |
| NESTLED | Bird made home round top of larch and settled comfortably (7) |
| TISSUES | Sit up and change uses of paper hankies (7) |
| SATIRES | Uses of ridicules, sarcasm to expose folly or vice to lampoon an individual |
| ENGLISH | Side American billiards player uses (of tongue) (7) |
| THESEUS | The varied uses of a classical hero |
| OCANADA | Words before "Where pines and maples grow" |
| PINEAPPLES | Bromeliaceous fruits with crowns of leaves; an old name for the strobili of cedar, fir, larch and spruce; or, finials resembling such woody seed-producing structures (10) |
| ACACIA | Spies appear after hiding odd bits of larch and oak tree (6) |
| ARCHIVE | Inside of larch, where bees lay down their honey store for the future |
| EE | The branch of engineering science that studies the uses of electricity and the equipment for power generation and distribution and the control of machines and communication |
| LOOS | First World War battle saw the first use of poison gas by the Allies (4) |
| FACADE | Veneer of larch and yew using alternate pieces (6) |
| CONIFER | Pine, spruce or larch tree (7) |
| SCHOLAR | Therefore, another kind of larch intrigued student (7) |
| ALDER | Hack back the withered larch and a riverside tree (5) |
| GRABBAG | Larch |
| PITCH | And toss - for first use of it? (5) |
| PROPAGANDA | The first use of this word in English was in reference to a Roman Catholic organization established in the 17th century by Pope Gregory XV; this word was part of its much longer Latin name. Today the |