| FLEXOR | A muscle whose contraction bends a limb or other part of the body (6) |
| FLEXES | Bends (a limb or joint) (6) |
| SOLEUS | A muscle whose major action is flexion of the ankle joint (6) |
| FLEX | Bend (a limb) (4) |
| SCOTCH | A line marked down for a game of hopping; a chock or wedge; or, whisky of the Spey or other part of "Alba" (6) |
| MEMBER | A bodily limb; or, by extension, a distinct part of a whole, such as an associate of a club, group or party (6) |
| DISTAL | (anatomy) Situated farthest from point of attachment or origin, as of a limb or bone. |
| SPICES | Usually dried and ground, these fragrant products derive from the seeds, bark, buds or other parts of plants |
| INVADE | Inadvisable to remove basil or move into other parts of the plot (6) |
| OSTEOPATHY | A system of healing based on the manipulation of bones or other parts of the body (10) |
| AKIMBO | Out on a limb or two (6) |
| ROTATOR | (GKN) Any muscle whose contraction turns a part of the body on its axis (7) |
| ELEVATOR | Muscle whose contraction raises a part of the body (8) |
| STUMPS | Word for truncated things, such as pencil ends, residual limbs or remnants of felled/fallen trees; "timbers" forming wickets; wooden legs; or, tortillons for blending in art (6) |
| CREOLE | Variant of French spoken in New Orleans and other parts of Louisiana (6) |
| POETIC | Lyrical image featuring every other part of forest (6) |
| KLUDGE | Every other part of beige, drumlike wheels in poor repair? |
| AMPUTEE | A person who has had a limb, or part of a limb, removed (7) |
| BLURSDAY | Part of the week that doesn't feel different from any other part of the week |
| REACH | Stretch of water between canal locks or river bends; a boxer's "wingspan"; a measure of the size of an audience exposed to an advert; or, the distance sailed between tacks |