| TWOBYFOUR | The number of hours in a day a carpenter might work ? |
| TWENTYFOUR | Number of hours in a day |
| TWELVE | Number of hours in a half day |
| ARENT | "There ___ enough hours in a day ..." |
| HITTHENAILONTHEHEAD | Be completely correct? A carpenter might do it (3,3,4,2,3,4) |
| ROT | Dry ___ (problem a carpenter might repair) |
| EVENING | The close of a day; a word used in the first ever 2 dn |
| PARTTIME | For less than the standard number of hours (4-4) |
| TIMEPIECE | Number of hours taken is shown on part of clock (9) |
| TIME | Concept measured in horology; or, a call or bell signalling the end of permitted drinking hours in a pub (4) |
| DAYNURSERY | Place where young children are kept for a number of hours where plants are reared (3,7) |
| KOALA | Featuring in Aboriginal Dreamtime stories and sleeping 18 hours a day, a eucalyptus-eating Australian marsupial known as a joey when young (5) |
| COURSELOAD | Number of credit hours in a semester |
| CALLITADAY | Words to describe 24-hours in a Bandon place of work (4,2,1,3) |
| RUSHTHROUGH | Charge by in the wee small hours in a rough hut (4,7) |
| HUSKY | Alaskan -; averaging between 50-100 miles a day, a working "musher" dog bred to pull an Arctic sled in a pack (5) |
| TWICE | How many times a day a stopped clock is right |
| RETIRED | Called it a day a stopped working (7) |
| AFRICAN | Somali, perhaps, given twenty-four hours in a prison |
| AUTOBAHN | Stricken U-boat takes hours in a northern route to Germany |