| ADAMSAPPLE | It stuck in his craw but Eve got the blame - enough to bring a lump to your throat (4'1,5) |
| CALCULUS | Copper in Ring heads for usual suspects - Newton and Leibniz got the blame for it (8) |
| EVOKED | Recalled that Eve got the thumbs up with 500 (6) |
| NECKTIE | Doing this up could bring a lump to one's throat (7) |
| RIBEYE | Eve got one from Adam to look at in butcher's window (3-3) |
| DERISIVE | They're scoffing but Eve is rid of it now (8) |
| BEVEL | I have the inclination but Eve is with L.B.! (5) |
| ONION | It's enough to bring a tear to the eye |
| GLOWER | Look angry enough to bring a gang leader down (6) |
| CONVERSE | Eve's got a corn and wants to talk about it (8) |
| LOUISXV | King is cross, stuck in his palace, about to leave |
| NOTETOSELF | Post-it stuck in a page of a wellness magazine? |
| WINDSORKNOT | Royal wedding brings a lump to the throat (7,4) |
| SCRAWNIEST | Ultimately furious, into craw sticks one that's extremely inferior (10) |
| AMEN | It stuck in the throat, in Macbeth, this name-change (4) |
| GORGET | From Old French for "throat", a piece of armour or part of a wimple worn to cover/protect the neck, hence a band of colour on the craw or crop of a hummingbird or other avian (6) |
| EVOKE | To sanction is, in woman, enough to bring it to mind (5) |
| BEAST | A bet's enough to bring out the animal in me |
| ARTICHOKE | Vegetable good for Arthur. I get it stuck in my throat (9) |
| CROP | A cereal or other cultivated plant; said plant's collective seasonal harvest or vintage; an abundance of something , such as hair; an end cut off; a finial; a fowl's craw; or, a whip (4) |