| GLOTTAL | _ stop, a plosive consonantal sound produced by the abrupt obstruction of airflow in the throat (7) |
| GLOTTALSTOP | A consonantal sound produced by closing and suddenly opening the vocal apparatus of the larynx (7,4) |
| REALALE | Area well designed with no end of airflow to supply mature beer (4,3) |
| PLOSIVE | Of a consonantal sound, produced with a sudden release of blocked air (7) |
| SONORANT | In phonetics, a frictionless speech sound (l, r, m etc.) produced without turbulent airflow in the vocal tract (8) |
| TRADEWINDS | Reliable airflows in the Tropics |
| TWANG | Ringing sound produced by the plucking of a taut string (5) |
| RASPBERRY | Rude sound produced by the cane (9) |
| VOLUME | Sound produced by the bookmaker (6) |
| SMOTHER | Stifle first of sounds produced by lover of pop (7) |
| BARK | A word for the abrupt cry of a dog; the tannin-rich covering of a tree trunk; a poetic word for a boat; or, fruit-and-nut-topped chocolate broken into jagged pieces |
| DESOTOS | 1934's Airflow and 1955's Fireflite, e.g. |
| SONICBOOM | Sound produced by an object travelling faster than the speed of sound; in dry air, approximately 760 mph (5,4) |
| NOISES | White ___: the sound produced by a large number of frequencies of roughly equal intensity (6) |
| CEREBRAL | Of consonant sounds, produced by inverting the tip of the tongue on the hard palate |
| VOICE | Sound produced in spoken communication or sung words; the ability to chant, croon, harmonise, warble or wassail well; a part for a chorister; a mode of utterance; or, a medium of expression (5) |
| BREEZES | Airflows |
| CLICK | ___ beetle, named for a sound it makes, or consonantal sound associated with Khoisan languages (5) |
| CARDIACARREST | The abrupt loss of heart function in a person (7,6) |
| COLDTURKEY | What describes the abrupt complete cessation of the use of an addictive drug? (4,6) |