| CARPORT | From which the vehicle ferry sails? (7) |
| ABUSER | One taking advantage of a vehicle ferry regularly |
| LEPUS | Latin designation of the hare from which the constellation bordered by Orion the Hunter, Columba the Dove and Eridanus the River derived its name (5) |
| MARSUPIUM | Another name for the pouch, from which the group takes its name, which is a flap of skin covering the nipples. |
| LACORUNA | What is the Spanish name of the port from which the Armada sailed in 1588? (2,6) |
| YLEM | According to the big bang theory, the hypothetical substance from which the elements developed (4) |
| USQUEBAUGH | Word derived from the Gaelic phrase ?water of life", from which the word whisky comes (10) |
| HUB | Central part of the wheel rotating with the axle and from which the spokes radiate |
| VANILLA | The only fruit-bearing plant in the orchid family, from which the world's second-most expensive spice after saffron derives (7) |
| CUSHIONS | Bumpers on the rails of snooker tables from which the balls rebound; or, the air-filled sections supporting hovercrafts (8) |
| THISTLE | Plant from which the goldfinch derived its Anglo Saxon name because of its love of the seeds which is a national symbol of Scotland (7) |
| ADOBE | What is the Spanish word for a sun-dried brick and for the clay soil from which the brick is made? (5) |
| LEEWARD | Away from the direction from which the wind is blowing (7) |
| CACAO | The common (and Spanish) name for the plant from which the cocoa bean comes (5) |
| RHINEGOLD | Material from which the ring of the Nibelung was made |
| TAW | The line from which the players shoot in marbles |
| EAST | The direction from which the sun rises (4) |
| CHALUMEAU | The instrument from which the clarinet was developed |
| THEBOSTONIANS | Henry James novel, published in 1886, set in the Massachusetts capital from which the work takes its |
| PAISLEY | Pattern of feather-shaped figures inspired by Indian pine cones; or, the Scottish town from which the print derived its name (7) |