| PECK | Like hens, eat a quantity of grain (4) |
| CHICKENFEED | What do hens eat? Peanuts! (7,4) |
| ATHENE | Goddess making hen eat (6) |
| TAKE | A scene or version of a shot filmed at one time; a sequence of recorded music; a capture of a chess piece; a catch of a ball; or, a quantity of copy given to a compositor (4) |
| SILO | Quantity of grains I located in grain store (4) |
| RARE | Like hens' teeth, proverbially |
| LAIR | "Den" sounds like "hen" (4) |
| WASH | A bathe, cleanse or rinse in water; a quantity of laundry; lotion; the wake of a ship; a tasteless drink; a thin coat of colour, glaze or slip for painting, pastry or pottery; or, pig swill (4) |
| ISOMERIC | One with a quantity of grain, mostly describing chemical differences (8) |
| BUSHEL | Shrubby plant needed before the Spanish produce a quantity of grain (6) |
| PACK | A bundle or load carried on the back of a donkey, for example; a hot or cold compress for an injury; or, a quantity of food in a wrapper (4) |
| DUTY | An obligation; a measure of an engine's efficiency; playground supervision; or, a quantity of water needed to irrigate an area of crops (4) |
| HAUL | Number of fish caught or of medals won; distance covered; or, a quantity of stolen goods (4) |
| PICK | Plectrum; the best of the bunch; dialect for a diamond in cards; or, a quantity of harvested crop (4) |
| REAM | Make a hole larger in a quantity of paper (4) |
| GOLDDUST | Contents of forty-niner's pan like hen's teeth (4,4) |
| GERM | Source a quantity of danger money (4) |
| LOAF | A quantity of bread (4) |
| SHOT | Exhausted a quantity of liquor (4) |
| BOLT | Run off a quantity of cloth (4) |