| INKUP | Give a sleeve, in a way |
| TAT | Part of a sleeve, in brief |
| ERASER | Teacher's sleeve, in a pinch |
| REESE | Angel who wears a leg sleeve in honor of A'ja Wilson |
| UNDERGARMENTS | Clothing with sleeve in belonging to fellows (13) |
| GARMENT | Man pocketing contents of sleeve in coat, perhaps (7) |
| SCUFFS | Scrapes part of sleeve in case of shingles (6) |
| CYLINDERLINER | Metal sleeve in an engine's piston |
| ARMHOLE | Gap for sleeve in garment |
| ACE | Card up one's sleeve, in an idiom |
| JAMBOREE | Scouts do stick first of badges on right sleeve in the middle (8) |
| AIRLINERS | Show off sleeves in planes (9) |
| SCOUR | Really roll up one's sleeves in cleaning |
| RAW | Without supportive equipment like knee sleeves, in powerlifting |
| LONGARMOFTHELAW | Police uniforms may need extra long sleeves in this far-reaching legal system (4,3,2,3,3) |
| TIPPET | A liripipe-like pendent streamer from a sleeve of a medieval cote-hardie or from a hood; a woman's short shoulder cape of fur; a long stole, often the whole pelt of a fox, marten or mink; or, an eccle |
| STRIPE | An old word for a whip to the flesh with a scourge or lash; a band of colour; a banded cloth or pattern, such as that in the Breton or candy style; or, a chevron on a sleeve (6) |
| BATWING | A sleeve of a garment with a deep armhole and a tight wrist (7) |
| ARM | A bodily brachium to which a branch, inlet, octopus tentacle, side of a chair or a sleeve is likened (3) |
| RAGLAN | A lord, a sleeve and a road made famous by Patrick Kavanagh |