| COOTIE | ___ catcher (term for a child's fortuneteller) |
| TEETOTUM | Archaic term for a child's spinning top (8) |
| MOLINA | Jose, Bengie and Yadier ___, catcher brothers with five World Series rings among them |
| FLAK | "Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the ___ Catchers" (Tom Wolfe book) |
| BAUBLE | Word for a child's toy; a gewgaw; a jester's baton; a piece of childish fooling; a plaything; tinsel; a trifle; a trinket; or, a shiny ornament to hang on one's Christmas conifer (6) |
| SPROG | From either "frogspawn", dialect for "lively young man" or a confused word for "cog", RAF slang for a recruit; or, an informal term for a child (5) |
| ANKLEBITER | Humorous term for a child (5,5) |
| KIDDY | Informal term for a child (5) |
| BAIRN | Scottish term for a child (5) |
| ENFANT | ____ terrible, French term for a child who embarrasses elders by untimely remarks (6) |
| TWEENIE | Informal term for a child between around eight to fourteen years of age (7) |
| DOBBIN | A horse for a child's birthday, complete with box? |
| STORYBOOK | Word for a child's fairy tale collection; thus, an adjective evoking a sense of fanciful, fantastical, idyllic or unreal charm, like the land of make-believe or happily ever after depicted in said ill |
| SASS | Cause for a child's scolding |
| HOSEY | Choose sides for a child's game down east |
| TREE | Place for a child's house |
| CHAIRS | Props for a child's musical game |
| STROLLER | Another name for a child's pushchair (8) |
| STABILISERS | Auxiliary wheels for a child's bike (11) |
| MACARONI | Material for a child's necklace |