| BRAS | Foundations of a woman's wardrobe? |
| LASSACTIONSUIT | Item in Wonder Woman's wardrobe? |
| SLIP | A bit of a mistake to find it in a woman's wardrobe (4) |
| PILE | Large, heavy beam driven into the ground to support a bridge, pier or foundations of a house (4) |
| ROOTS | Foundations (of a tree) |
| FUND | Word travelling from the "base, foundation" of a plot of land or literal "bottom" of a merchant's cash chest to a modern fluid asset, stock of money or supply to be drawn upon (4) |
| TREE | Author of Wilding ; the foundation of a saddle; or, any one of a series of organisms growing in an arboretum (4) |
| SOCLE | Low plain plinth used as a support for a statue, column etc. or as the foundation of a wall (5) |
| FOOTING | Secure grip with one's pedes; the foundation of a column or a wall, thus the basis upon which something is founded; one's standing in relation to others; a dance; or, plain lace (7) |
| STEREOBETE | From "to walk", a masonry foundation of a stone building; or, the substructure of an ancient Greek or Roman temple (10) |
| RAND | A border; or, a leather strip forming the foundation of a shoe's heel (4) |
| PASTEUR | French microbiologist Louis ___, known for his breakthrough work on the spread of diseases and for setting many of the foundations of public health |
| BASIS | Foundation of a theory or process (5) |
| ROADBED | Foundation of a way boarded around (7) |
| BASE | One serving as the foundation of a cheerleading stunt |
| ROUX | Foundation of a sauce (4) |
| LAW | Foundation of a civil society |
| EVENTRADES | Foundation of a barter system |
| ROOT | In music, the note forming the foundation of a chord |
| BEDROCK | Foundation, of a type |