| FETTER | A chain or shackle placed on the feet (6) |
| LEGIRON | Shackle placed around the ankle: 2 wds. |
| STRING | A chain or something to tie up with (6) |
| TUG | A sudden forcible pull or wrench, such as that figuratively in love or war; a boat or plane for towing; a chain or rope for hauling; a horse's trace for draughting; or, any hard struggle (3) |
| PULLEY | A wheel that carries a flexible rope, cord, cable, chain, or belt on its rim. This tool is used singly or in combination to transmit energy and motion. (6) |
| ANKLET | An ornamental talus chain; or, a bobbysock, reaching the astragalus (6) |
| GROGGY | Dizzy and unsteady on the feet (6) |
| PLATES | Dishes on the feet, say (6) |
| SKATES | Sports equipment worn on the feet (6) |
| NIMBLE | Quick on the feet (6) |
| THONGS | They are privately worn on the feet (6) |
| UNSHOD | Without anything on the feet (6) |
| TETHER | What is a rope, chain, or the like, by which an animal is fastened (6) |
| SIERRA | Spanish mountain chain; or, a former Ford car model (6) |
| SWINGS | Seats suspended by ropes or chains; or, shifts in opinions, moods or voting patterns (6) |
| GUARDS | Fenders placed before open fires; watch chains; or, officials in charge of trains or, formerly, stagecoaches (6) |
| PEBBLY | Hard on the feet |
| LINK | One of the rings of a chain; or, a real or figurative connection (4) |
| DAISY | Threaded by its stem to form a chain or garland, a "fresh" flower that covers its yellow disc in the evening and reveals it in the morning (5) |
| NUNCHAKU | In martial arts, a pair of hardwood sticks joined by a chain or cord and used as a weapon (8) |