| ARRIS | Edge of a |
| SPINE | Heartwood of a tree; a quill of a hedgehog; a bound edge of a book; a series of vertebrae; or, courage (5) |
| BEAD | One of a series of items strung to form a necklace or a rosary; or, the edge of a pneumatic tyre that grips a wheel when inflated (4) |
| CRIMP | One of a series of pinches around the edge of a pie crust; or, a soft bead designed to be flattened with pliers in jewellery-making (5) |
| COG | Each of a series of projections on the edge of a wheel |
| CRUST | Pastry edge of a pie, pasty or quiche; outer part of a loaf or slice of bread/toast; or, Earth's layer above the mantle (5) |
| SNICK | Knot in thread; or, a slight deflection of a cricket ball off the edge of a bat (5) |
| BRIM | Projecting edge of a hat; or, the upper edge of a cup or mug (4) |
| RATCHETS | Series of angular teeth on the edge of a bar or rim of a wheel into which cogs may engage (8) |
| BUCKET | A pail; a compartment on the outer edge of a waterwheel; or, a digger, tractor or dredger's scoop (6) |
| BALUSTRADE | A row of small pillars joined by a rail forming an ornamental barrier along the edge of a balcony or terrace (10) |
| PURLIEU | Historically, land on the edge of a forest, eg in Dibden ____, on the edge of the New Forest |
| ORLE | A type of narrow border detached from the edge of a heraldic shield (4) |
| STYLE | The time-telling edge of a sun dial's gnomon; or, part of a flower's carpel bearing the stigma (5) |
| EAVES | Overhanging edge of a roof from which a form of clandestine listening-in takes its name (5) |
| ELEVON | A movable section of the trailing edge of a delta wing on an aircraft (6) |
| FACING | A piece of fabric used to finish the raw edge of a garment (6) |
| SELVAGE | A woven edge of a fabric (7) |
| APRON | Edge of a stage or a green |
| SHORELINE | Edge of a body of water(9) |