| HOMEBREW | Instant reflection in language a product of the domestic press? |
| FIGMENT | A piece of fruit sort of signified a product of the imagination |
| GRAMMAR | The morphology and syntax of a language; a book containing a description of said linguistry; or, the basic rules of a field of knowledge (7) |
| ELUVIUM | Mass of sand and silt which is a product of the erosion of rocks (7) |
| CARTON | Crafty type involved in racket is a product of the boxing industry perhaps (6) |
| STITCHES | Found in Jersey, a product of the sewers (8) |
| TURNOVER | A product of the pastrycook's cash flow? |
| LAMP | This may illuminate a product of the palm (4) |
| BLOOMER | Rose is a product of the bakery (7) |
| STONEWORK | JFK or Nixon could be seen as a product of the Masons? (9) |
| AMBERGRIS | How could it grab me, Sir, as a product of the spermaceti whale? (9) |
| SCUD | Cloud, rain, spray etc driven fast by the wind; a swift run/runner; or, in the Scots language, a state of nudity (4) |
| IDIOM | A form of expression peculiar to a language, a person or group of people |
| MATRON | She is in charge of the domestic affairs of a hospital. (6) |
| LEXICON | Vocabulary of a language, a dictionary (7) |
| WILDCAT | Creature, Felis silvestris, that is regarded as the ancestor of the domestic cat (7) |
| GUANACO | Mammal of South America believed to be an ancestor of the domestic llama (7) |
| ARAMAIC | Language a wealthy husband dropped, having a degree in it |
| LAYER | The stratum of the domestic fowl maybe (5) |
| HOMEFIRE | One of the domestic hearths to be kept burning in song (4-4) |