| CHEQUERED | Having a pattern of mixed fortune (9) |
| STIPPLED | Having a pattern of dots, on a ceiling perhaps (8) |
| RETICULATED | Having a pattern of interlacing lines (of porcelain) (11) |
| DOTTED | Having a pattern of small round marks (6) |
| CHECKED | having a pattern of squares |
| GEOMETRICAL | Having a pattern of regular lines and shapes |
| POINTILLE | A pattern of tiny dots gauffered, punched or stippled with a fine burin in the art of armoury, bookbinding, gilding or gold tooling; or, the decorative technique used (9) |
| CLOWNFISH | Of all the ocean residents who rock this colorful orange and white pattern, each one has a pattern of his own |
| STARBURST | A pattern of line or rays radiating from a central object (9) |
| DOGSTOOTH | --- --- check, a pattern of broken or jagged checks, especially printed on or woven into cloth (4-5) |
| STRIPED | Having a pattern made up of coloured lines (7) |
| WHORL | Word for a spindle's flywheel or wharve originally, later a pattern of concentric circles; a single convolution in a spiral shell; a radial arrangement of petals or leaves; or, a gyre or swirl in a fi |
| BIRDSEYE | A fermata; a kind of primrose, speedwell, tobacco or other plant with flowers of two contrasting colours; a small yet fiery red chilli pepper; a pattern of spotted diamonds; or, a term denoting a view |
| INFORMATION | Having a pattern that shows intelligence (11) |
| INLAID | Having a pattern set into the surface (6) |
| STOPBIT | In asynchronous data transfers one of a pattern of data which indicate the end of a character or of the whole transmission. (4,3) |
| DAMASK | Short word for a form of sword blade steel with a wavy pattern; or, an originally hand-woven reversible brocade-like silk textile with a pattern of animals, flowers, fruit etc (6) |
| GRID | A network of intersecting lines forming a pattern of squares, observed in everyday things such as a crossword puzzle, map, piece of graph paper, spreadsheet or trellis (4) |
| RHYTHM | Related to the Greek meaning "to flow", a vowelless word for a pattern of recurrence, such as musical beat or a regular harmonious sequence of colours, elements or shapes in art (6) |
| PEYTON | Author of a number of books for children and young people, including Apple Won't Jump, Fly-by-Night, A Pattern of Roses, The Scruffy Pony as well as her classic Flambards novels that were adapted to s |