| SCHOONER | Swift sailing ship; large sherry glass; or, a covered prairie wagon (8) |
| CLIPPER | Swift sailing ship (7) |
| BRIG | Sailing ship, huge, spans river (4) |
| COVEREDWAGON | Prairie wagon |
| WAGONWITHACANVASROOF | Prairie wagon |
| CONESTOGA | Prairie wagon |
| CLOISTER | An enclosure; a covered arcade or walkway as a place of religious seclusion in a cathedral, convent or monastery; or, monastic life (8) |
| GALLEONS | Ships large volume across Spain |
| CAPONIER | A covered passage across a ditch around a fortified place (8) |
| PRETTY | From "clever, crafty, good, neat, skilful, sporty", word for the fairway of a golf course, the fluted part of a glass or a knick-knack; or, one regarded as attractive in a dainty, delicate or graceful |
| BEAKER | A large drinking-glass or a large cup without a handle (6) |
| ETOUFFEE | Cajun or Creole stew cooked in a covered pan |
| GALLERIA | Italian word used to describe a covered arcade of small shops (8) |
| SEED | Unit of botanical life such as an acorn, bean, conker, kernel, key, nut, pea, pip or stone; a fragment of coral; a bubble in glass; or, a small crystal from which a larger one is grown (4) |
| SUNDAE | With a name similar to that of the Christian Sabbath, a cherry-and-syrup-topped ice cream served in a tulip-shaped glass; or, a type of mixed nougat or other confection (6) |
| VANGUARD | A covered vehicle watchman for the foremost division of an army |
| BRANDY | Liquor served in a balloon glass or a snifter or used to flavour butter or hard sauce for Christmas pudding (6) |
| FOIL | Lobe or leaf-shaped curve between cusps in Gothic tracery; mercury coating on a looking-glass; or, a brilliance-enhancing layer of metal placed under a gemstone (4) |
| STEM | Slender midsection of a wine glass; or, a banana tree stalk from which several bunches or "hands" grow (4) |
| TOPOFF | Fill fuller, as a glass or a gas tank |