| ANCON | Ancient Greek "bend", thus an anatomical or architectural elbow (5) |
| THEATRE | A building or room adapted for anatomical or surgical demonstrations (7) |
| ORBIT | A medieval cart's "wheel-track", thus a planet's repeated "track" through the heavens; or, the "rut" in which an anatomical oculus rests (5) |
| NODAL | To do with an anatomical bulge or swelling (5) |
| OGIVE | Curve or architectural terms which sounds like a donation plea (5) |
| BEZEL | Word for the sloping cutting edge of a chisel, thus an oblique face of a cut diamond; or, a grooved collet in which said gem or a watch crystal is set (5) |
| GENRE | A "kind" in French, thus an artistic, literary or musical category or style in English (5) |
| JOINT | An anatomical articulation; the hinge of a book cover; or, a large piece of meat for roasting (5) |
| TILES | Flat pieces used to form words in Scrabble; or, architectural slabs known in Portugal as azulejos (5) |
| CHECK | A threat to a king in chess, thus an arrest, control, curb or restraint (5) |
| ANSON | A girl embraces, thus, an old sailor (5) |
| SOCHI | Thus an Athenian cross with Olympic city? (5) |
| TUBAL | Relating to an anatomical duct |
| DUFFER | Word for a no-good pedlar or hawker of sham jewellery first, thus an incompetent person; a useless fellow or fogey; a counterfeit coin; a bungling golfer; or, an unproductive mine (6) |
| EMINENCE | From "jut, project", a word for distinction, fame or high rank; a height or a hill; an anatomical protuberance; a cardinal's title; or, a shade of purple (8) |
| DANCETTE | Word, from "tooth", for a heraldic or architectural pattern or line of chevrons, indents or zigzags reminiscent of a set of teeth (8) |
| REGION | District; or, an anatomical area of the body around/near an organ (6) |
| GYRE | A literary word for a circle, revolution, ring, spiral, swirl or whirl, thus an atmospheric/oceanic vortex; or, a whorl of leaves or petals (4) |
| STOUND | An old-fashioned or Scots "hour, moment, season, time", thus an ache, assault, astonishment, pang, stroke, time of trouble or violent shock (6) |
| MANDORLA | An Italian "almond", thus an amygdaloid aureole, frame, glory, panel or enclosure of light surrounding the figure of a holy person such as Christ; or, the oval-shaped work of art filling said vesica p |