| LAGOMORPH | Rabbit or hare |
| BUCK | Male roe deer, rabbit or hare; bronco's high-kicking jump; informal term for $1; or, a dandy or fop (4) |
| BUNS | Fruited, spiced rolls such as teacakes; hairstyles worn by some ballerinas or equestrians; or, Scottish word for tails of rabbits or hare (4) |
| DOE | Female rabbit or hare (3) |
| SCUT | Short tail of a deer, rabbit or hare (4) |
| TRACE | Group of rabbits or hares (5) |
| BRAINED | Follower or hare or bird |
| MAMMAL | Bear or hare, e.g. |
| RACER | Proverbial tortoise or hare, e.g. |
| LOIN | A cut of venison or hare (4) |
| SCATTY | Pole getting spiteful or hare-brained |
| ELECTORATE | Academic worried by Burke or Hare finally choosing body |
| BUN | Small cake or fruited confection such as a teacake; dialect or playful name for a rabbit or squirrel; hare's scut; or, a chignon-like hairstyle of an equestrian or a ballerina (3) |
| ANGORA | Could be a goat or a rabbit or a cat or the last one eating egg (6) |
| SCRAPE | A very thin layer of butter on a piece of bread or toast; a tuneless stroke of a violin bow; a mass of earth dug up by a rabbit; or, an awkward or embarrassing predicament (6) |
| SMEUSE | A dialect word, combining the Old French for "secret hiding place" and "smoot", meaning a small hole, for a gap in a fence or hedge for the passing of a rabbit or a hare (6) |
| BURN | Stream or river traversed by rabbit or squirrel? (4) |
| DOES | Females of the deer, hare, kangaroo, rabbit or squirrel (4) |
| FUR | A fox, mink, rabbit or other animal's coat; or, a garment of said pelage (3) |
| LOP | Word meaning droop or hang, as in the ears of a rabbit; or, clip/prune (3) |