| LASTS | From the Old English meaning "footprints", wooden models upon which cordwainers fashion shoes (5) |
| LAST | Derived from Old English meaning "footprint", model upon which shoes/boots are fashioned (4) |
| HEELS | High fashion shoes (5) |
| FOURTEEN | Lanchester model upon which Daimler's Conquest was based (8) |
| JIMMYCHOO | High-fashion shoe designer |
| ALDO | Fast-fashion shoe brand |
| VESTIGE | Meaning "footprint", a surviving remnant or trace of something which is lost or no longer present (7) |
| MONTH | From the Old English meaning "moon", each of the 12 divisions or lunations of the calendar year (5) |
| WRONG | From the Old English meaning "awry, unjust", word meaning either incorrect or immoral (5) |
| YARDS | From the Old English meaning "twigs", units used since the medieval period that are equal to three feet (5) |
| WATCH | From the Old English meaning "to be or remain awake", a period of surveillance; a sailor's turn of duty; or, a timepiece for the wrist (5) |
| SPELL | From the Old English meaning "story, speech" or "narration", a word for a magic formula or incantation (5) |
| DAIRY | From the Old English meaning "kneader of bread", a building, farm or room where milk is processed or made into butter, cheese, cream, creme fraiche and other produce (5) |
| HARVEST | From the Old English meaning "autumn", the cutting and gathering of crops during the approach to the aforesaid season, or the name given to its corresponding full moon (7) |
| ACRE | From the Old English meaning "open field", a word for a unit of land area that is etymologically related to the name of the fruit of the oak (4) |
| PLANT | From the Old English for "seedling" and the Latin for "sprout, cutting", any one of the botanical organisms forming Earth's collective flora including fern, herb and moss (5) |
| SHEEN | Word, from the Old English for "beautiful" and related to the Old Norse for "white horse", for lustre; or, glistening or splendid attire (5) |
| STOKE | Common prefix for English towns and villages, from the Old English word for place (5) |
| ACTON | District in the London Borough of Ealing named from the Old English for 'oak farm' (5) |
| HAWS | From the Old English meaning "hedge", fruits of the tree Crataegus that form part of the countryside's seasonal bounty with brambles, rosehips, elderberries and sloes (4) |