| CULTURES | Ways of life (8) |
| MULTICULTURAL | Allowing variety of ways of life (13) |
| CIVILIZATIONS | The societies, cultures and ways of life of specific areas or periods (6) |
| MORES | Ways of life further south (5) |
| ERRANTRY | Way of life of wandering knight (8) |
| RELIGION | Belief - way of life of monks and nuns (8) |
| VEGANISM | Way of life which avoids use of all animal products (8) |
| SPARTANS | Citizens of an ancient Greek city in the South Peloponnese, famous for their discipline, military prowess and austere way of life (8) |
| ESPOUSAL | The adoption or support of a cause or way of life (8) |
| GONATIVE | Adopt way of life of country one is living in (2,6) |
| FASTLANE | Type A person's way of life |
| URBANISM | City dwellers' way of life |
| BIOTA | Word, from the Greek for "life" or "by way of life", for the animal and plant life, aka flora and fauna, of a given habitat, period or region (5) |
| INTHEFASTLANE | (Of way of life) full of excitement (colloq.) |
| AFAREWELLTOARMS | Novel by Ernest Hemingway, who was a great admirer of the Spanish way of life and a regular visitor to the country (1,8,2,4) |
| EXISTENCE | Way of life of sixteen assorted Anglicans (9) |
| HINDU | Follower of "Sanatana Dharma" (natural way of life) |
| MODUSVIVENDI | Trendy for those Americans against divine manipulation of a way of life in Rome (5,7) |
| NORWAY | Birth country of Magnus Carlsen where skiing is a way of life for locals (6) |
| REGIMEN | A systematic way of life or course of therapy, often including exercise and a recommended diet (7) |