| BUREAU | A division of a govemment department (6) |
| STANZA | Group of lines forming a division of a poem (6) |
| BRANCH | British farm serves as a division of a larger organisation |
| PANE | Word originally for a rag or a piece of cloth that later came to mean a division of a window or its sheet of glass; or, in philately, a page of stamps from a booklet (4) |
| LANE | A streak of dust and gas in a spiral galaxy; a narrow country road between hedges; a passage through a crowd; or, a division of a track or pool for one runner or swimmer (4) |
| FOOT | Measure equal to 12 inches; bottom of the stairs; end of a bed; or, a division of a line of poetry (4) |
| PART | Actor or actress's role in a play or film; a division of a book or serial; or, a fraction of a whole (4) |
| SCENE | A division of a play; the decoration of a theatre stage; a stormy encounter or frosty incident; or, a niveous panorama, polar paysage or any other such landscape or winterscape (5) |
| LEGION | A division of 3,000 to 6,000 men in the armies of ancient Rome (6) |
| INNING | In baseball, a division of the game consisting of a turn at bat and a turn in the field for each side |
| ASPECT | Elevation of priest into a division of the church (6) |
| LIGHT | A pane of a greenhouse; or, a division of a mullioned window (5) |
| MOVEMENT | An alliance of artists; a division of a symphony; a gesture; motion, as opposed to inertia or stasis; tempo; or, a timepiece's clock/wheelwork (8) |
| ENOUGH | A division of guardsmen ought to be sufficient (6) |
| PERIOD | A division of time (6) |
| RIDING | Sport to take up in a division of Yorkshire? (6) |
| STREAM | Master who adjusted to a division of his pupils (6) |
| SEASON | A division of the year (6) |
| SCHISM | A division of the church (6) |
| SEQUENCE | A division of a film roughly equivalent to a scene in a stage play (8) |