| ONTHEWARPATH | BOUND TO START A FlGHT |
| TERRIERS | THEY FlGHT THOUGH THEY RE NOT BOXERS |
| SPRINGROLL | Is a Chinese meal bound to start with it? |
| SETUPSHOP | Solid periods of good fortune - bound to start trading? |
| PRIMER | Bookish sort is bound to start you off (6) |
| JUMP | Bound to start (4) |
| SANDBAG | Hit hard, and bound to start going into decline (7) |
| ESCAPOLOGIST | Performer who's bound to start act, but not to finish it (12) |
| CASTOFF | What to do in a craft to start a row and what to do in a row to finish a craft (4,3) |
| OPENER | Utensil for removing a crown cap from a bottle or a lid from a tin; first goal in a match; or, a comment used to start a conversation (6) |
| SERVICE | Employment in the armed forces or as a domestic, for example; shot to start a point in tennis; set of matching crockery for use at a table; church ceremony; or, an overhaul of a car (7) |
| ANT | It takes only one queen ___ to start a new colony (Fun fact: Within a year, it may be home to up to 250,000 critters) |
| SNOW | Want to control the weather?: When you're holding a ___ globe, you hold the power to start a flurry right in the palm of your hand |
| MOTET | Just a little bit shown to start a piece of a song |
| KICK | _ -start, to start a motorcycle by pushing a pedal sharply downward (4) |
| TALLORDER | It's a lot to expect to start a lord lieutenant on command (4,5) |
| FOLLOWON | In cricket, to start a second innings immediately after a first as the first was below the opponents' by a prescribed amount (6,2) |
| SWARM | Body of honeybees that emigrate from a hive and fly off together, accompanied by a queen, to start a new colony (5) |
| ICE | What to break to start a conversation |
| STRIKEALIGHT | Gosh, here's a way to start a fire |