| KINE | Old word for cattle (4) |
| RECK | Euphemism for heaven's opposite as an interjection of annoyance; or, dialect for a cheese-drying frame, a fodder rack for cattle or a grating across a river for catching fish (4) |
| HECK | Euphemism for heaven's opposite as an interjection of annoyance; or, dialect for a cheese-drying frame, a fodder rack for cattle or a grating across a river for catching fish (4) |
| FEED | Word for fodder/forage for cattle or horses; nourishment for babies; or, informally, a hearty or plentiful meal (4) |
| BYRE | Barn for cattle (4) |
| MART | Trade centre, particularly for cattle (4) |
| OXEN | One bothered about wrong sign for cattle (4) |
| HERD | Collective noun for cattle, elephants, fairies, sea horses and wrens (4) |
| MASH | Warm bran-based feed for cattle, horses or poultry; or, potato puree as an accompaniment to bangers (4) |
| BARN | Place for cattle |
| BULL | For cattle, what you call a young male |
| KRAALS | A word of Dutch origin for the enclosures for cattle or sheep (6) |
| LITTER | Word for a bed in medieval times, later hay, rushes, straw etc as bedding for cattle or horses; a brood of kittens, piglets or other animals; or, rubbish, carelessly strewn on the ground (6) |
| CROFTS | Old farms, some of the best for cattle rearing |
| LEGROPE | Tie for cattle (3-4) |
| NEATHOUSE | Tidy home for cattle? (4-5) |
| SAGOGRASS | Tall tough grass of Australia grown as forage for cattle (4,5) |
| MURRAIN | Old name for cattle or sheep diseases, sometimes used to describe a biblical plague of Egypt |
| STOCKROOM | But this doesn't usually offer space for cattle (5-4) |
| ALFALFA | Feed for cattle and horses |