| Eli and Peyton Manning, for two: Abbr. | 38 |
| Elgin __ (British Museum display) | 33 |
| Elgar’s “Symphony No. 1 in ___ Major” | 49 |
| Elgar's "____ Variations" | 39 |
| Elgar's "___ Variations" | 38 |
| Elgar's "Symphony in ___" | 39 |
| Elgar's "King _____" | 34 |
| Elgar's "King ___" | 32 |
| Elf's transportation, in fantasy novels | 43 |
| Eleventh zodiac sign's picture? | 35 |
| Eleventh largest lake in the world | 34 |
| Eleventh hour, formally speaking? | 33 |
| Elevens, not ones, in blackjack? | 32 |
| Eleven-time NBA All-Star Patrick | 32 |
| Eleven of the elements, under normal conditions | 47 |
| Elevator operator's announcement | 36 |
| Elevator direction half the time | 32 |
| Elevator device to prevent free fall | 36 |
| Elevates vehicles, as in a garage | 33 |
| Elevated communication structure | 32 |
| Elephants, to an elephant hunter | 32 |
| Elephants' predators, in myth | 33 |
| Elephant-eating bird of folklore | 32 |
| Elephant-carrying birds, in myth | 32 |
| Elephant's opposite, symbolically | 37 |
| Elephant's natural enemy, for short? | 40 |
| Elephant with a monkey named Zephir | 35 |
| Elephant of children's literature | 37 |
| Elephant of children's fiction | 34 |
| Elephant of children's books | 32 |
| Elephant king married to Celeste | 32 |
| Elephant in Jean de Brunhoff books | 34 |
| Elephant in a children's classic | 36 |
| Elephant from children's books | 34 |
| Elephant boy turns into Arabian dad | 35 |
| Eleniak of ''Baywatch'' | 39 |
| Elements of some psychological tests | 36 |
| Elements missing from plasma TVs | 32 |
| Elementary student at Little Dipper School | 42 |
| Elementary Silicon Valley daily? | 32 |
| Elementary school student's item | 36 |
| Elementary school percussion instrument | 39 |
| Elementary school grads, typically | 34 |
| Elementary school arithmetic assignment | 39 |
| Elementary particles with charges of +2/3 | 41 |
| Elementary particle with no charge | 34 |
| Elementary Oscar-winning producer? | 34 |
| Elementary education, facetiously | 33 |
| Elemental source of a blue pigment | 34 |
| Element's degree of combining power | 39 |
| Element with twice as many protons as manganese | 47 |
| Element whose name roughly means "lazy" | 49 |
| Element used to treat diaper rash | 33 |
| Element used to make semiconductors | 35 |
| Element used in radiation research | 34 |
| Element used in photoelectric cells | 35 |
| Element used in nuclear technology | 34 |
| Element used in light bulb filaments | 36 |
| Element used in glass production | 32 |
| Element used in enamel manufacturing | 36 |
| Element used in ceramics pigments | 33 |
| Element used for shielding nuclear reactors | 43 |
| Element used for alloys and medical compounds | 45 |
| Element that's liquid at room temperature | 45 |
| Element that quickly oxidizes in air | 36 |
| Element that is twice as dense as lead | 38 |
| Element tested for in home inspections | 38 |
| Element often found in meteorites | 33 |
| Element of passive solar building design | 40 |
| Element of old burlesque strip teases | 37 |
| Element of many murder mysteries? | 33 |
| Element obtained from cassiterite | 33 |
| Element next to iodine in the periodic table | 44 |
| Element named for Marie Curie's homeland | 44 |
| Element named for ancient Scandinavia | 37 |
| Element named for a mythical queen | 34 |
| Element named for a mythical Greek weeper | 41 |
| Element in vacuum tube filaments | 32 |
| Element in the cleanser 20 Mule Team | 36 |
| Element in many Agatha Christie books | 37 |
| Element in Einstein's formula | 33 |
| Element in comic books since 1949 | 33 |
| Element in a clutch performance? | 32 |
| Element found much more in robots than humans | 45 |
| Element found in Geiger counters | 32 |
| Element forming poisonous compounds | 35 |
| Element discovered by the Curies | 32 |
| Element discovered by Marie and Pierre Curie | 44 |
| Element class including scandium | 32 |
| Element below plata in the periodic table | 41 |
| Element below helium in the periodic table | 42 |
| Element before antimony in the periodic table | 45 |
| Element #5, which has a dumb-sounding name | 42 |
| Elegantly maintained or designed | 32 |
| Elegant to the point of absurdity | 33 |
| Elegant dance that originated in France | 39 |
| Elegant attire for a cigar puffer | 33 |
| Elegant and charming actress turned princess? | 46 |
| Electrophorus electricus, for one | 33 |
| Electronics entrepreneur's publication? | 43 |