| FLOW | Uninterrupted stream or discharge |
| EGERIS | You carry out or carry away or discharge |
| DISMISS | Remove or discharge from employment or service (7) |
| LETOFF | Exonerate or discharge? (3,3) |
| EGERO | I carry out, bear off, or discharge |
| EMIT | Give off, send forth, or discharge (4) |
| EMITS | Give off, send forth, or discharge (5) |
| EMISSION | Emanation or discharge |
| FLUX | Flow or discharge (4) |
| SECRETE | Conceal, or discharge |
| ICEBERGS | Around the Antarctic coast, shelves, glaciers, and ice sheets continually "calve," or discharge, ________ into the seas (8) |
| HAVEN | Sheltered port where ships can take on or discharge cargo (5) |
| CANNONRY | The use or discharge of heavy pieces of artillery, typically mounted on wheels (8) |
| TRICKLE | A dribble of water or other liquid; an intermittent rivulet or stream; or, a steady flow of people or traffic (7) |
| COURSE | The headwaters of a stream or river; or, a book or article used to provide evidence (6) |
| FEEDER | Container filled with nuts or seeds for garden birds; a bib/bottle for a baby or a child; a tributary stream; or, a railway branch linking outlying areas to the trunk line (6) |
| STEPPINGSTONE | One of a series of rocks or "hippings" on which to hip or hop across a stream; or, by extension, any means of advancement (8-5) |
| BURN | Stream or river traversed by rabbit or squirrel? (4) |
| BEAM | A stream or flow of particles; a ray of light; a rafter; or, a radiant smile (4) |
| MAELSTROM | From Dutch for "grind stream" or "crushing current", a word, introduced into English by Edgar Allan Poe, for a powerful whirlpool, hence confusion, turmoil or a turbulent state of affairs (9) |