| REHEM | Change the length of a dress |
| KNEE | Keen to change the length of some socks (4) |
| SPAN | Unit of measurement equal to the width of a human hand, or 9 inches; or, the length of a bird's wing from tip to tip (4) |
| DIAM | The length of a straight line passing through the center of a circle and connecting two points on the circumference. |
| CORSAGE | Derived from the French meaning "body", a small boutonniere-like bouquet or spray worn on the wrist or pinned to the bodice of a dress (7) |
| TUCKER | Lacy bib worn historically as a modesty piece in the neckline of a dress; a fuller; or, a word used informally in Australia for food (6) |
| KRYPTONISOTOPE | The length of a meter is based precisely on the amount of light emitted from this |
| FOOT | A measure of 12 inches, originally based on the length of a man's pes (4) |
| KATIE | Ledecky who swam the length of a pool with a glass of chocolate milk balanced on her head |
| TRIMESTER | One third of the length of a human pregnancy (9) |
| PINAFORE | Type of apron worn over the top of a dress and pinned at the front |
| TRAIN | The long back section of a dress that trails along the floor behind the wearer (5) |
| BODICE | The upper part of a dress, from the shoulder to the waist (6) |
| WAISTLINE | Intersection of the bodice and skirt of a dress (9) |
| HEMLOCK | Piece of a dress, a strand of hair and poison? |
| ABEAM | On a line at right angles to the length of a ship or aircraft (5) |
| ELLS | Units of measurement, roughly the length of a human arm (4) |
| BLUEWHALE | Growing to more than twice the length of a Tyrannosaurus rex and exhibited in skeletal form in the Natural History Museum in London, Earth's largest living animal (4,5) |
| ABRIDGE | Reduce the length of a book or a card game (7) |
| LIES | Describes the length of a fish? |