| NICOTIANA | Flower bed a Scotsman planted in Ulster area? |
| GENIAL | Friendly set tours Ulster area (6) |
| COT | A simple country bower; a swinging naval bed; a child's crib; a hospital bed; a hammock; a shelter for livestock; or, a fingerstall (3) |
| KNOT | A tie in a cord, lace, ribbon or rope; a clump or cluster; a lump; a tangle; an intricate flower-bed; or, a rosette (4) |
| COVER | Jacket of a book; the top sheet, blanket or quilt of a bed; a place setting at a restaurant table/formal dinner; or, a thicket used as a shelter by game (5) |
| LAIR | A bed; a grave; a wild animal's den; an enclosure for beasts; a hideaway; a mire; or, a flashy man or show-off (4) |
| BECK | Northern English word, of Old Norse origin, for a brook or a stream with a stony bed; a summoning nod, wave or forefinger gesture; or, Scots dialect for a bow or a curtsey (4) |
| TRUNDLE | A small wheel or castor; the act of rolling slowly; a wheeled bed; a quill of gold thread in heraldry; or, a hoop (7) |
| TURNOUT | Word for a getting out of bed; a call to duty; a coming on shift or attendance at work; an assemblage or muster generally; get-up; or, the manner in which one is arrayed or equipped (7) |
| COTTAGE | Time in bed, a long time, in type of hospital? |
| COTONEASTER | Seen in the garden bed, a single flower |
| CLOT | In a small bed, a large twit (4) |
| DUSTBATH | A bird's act of rolling in sand or a flower bed as a preening ritual (4-4) |
| SEEDS | They're planted in a flower bed |
| TWIN | Bedroom with a pair of single beds; a macle in crystallography; or, either of two born at a single birth (4) |
| DONERKEBAB | Broken bed, a sorry conclusion to a boozy night out? (10) |
| BERTHA | On board a ship, bed a girl (6) |
| CHEROOT | In bed a valiant man needs something to smoke (7) |
| BOXED | In bed, a beast of burden practised pugilism |
| COLT | Left, in bed, a little horse (4) |