| STAIRS | Series or flight of steps (6) |
| SHOWER | Brief cascade, fall or flight of something such as arrows, raindrops, shooting stars, snowflakes, sparks |
| JACOBS | Flight of steps at Cheddar Gorge and a Sidmouth beach (6,6) |
| LADDER | Flight of steps at Cheddar Gorge and a Sidmouth beach (6,6) |
| ANGELS | An informal word for nurses; divine messengers known collectively as a choir, chorus, host or flight; or, guardian spirits (6) |
| ESCAPE | Meaning "remove one's cloak", a word for breaking free, avoidance of danger or flight from reality (6) |
| PERRON | Make mistake by parking on flight of steps |
| STAMPEDE | Rush scattering of animals / confused headlong rush or flight of a group of people |
| DECADE | A series or group of 10 (6) |
| ENNEAD | A series or group of nine (6) |
| DANGER | Fight-or-flight response generator |
| HIATUS | A break in continuity of a work, series or activity (6) |
| CATENA | Connected series or chain, especially of patristic comments on the Bible (6) |
| SPECULATION | From "lookout, watchtower", a word for guesswork or flight of fancy; a risky venture based on said conjecture; or, an old gambling game in which trump cards are bought and sold (11) |
| STRING | Series or succession (6) |
| EDDIE | Fight or Flight of the Munster man (5) |
| STAIR | One of a flight of steps; or, in the Scots language, the entire series of said treads, from landing to floor (5) |
| SCHEDULED | (Of an aircraft or flight) forming part of a regular service (9) |
| SPIRALSTAIRCASE | Flight of steps winding in a contin uous curve (6,9) |
| STAIRWAY | Ray waits around flight of steps (8) |