| CARDIGANS | Halves of twinsets |
| KNITS | Formed from West Germanic unions of "binds, loops" and Middle English "nets", one's cardies, jumpers, pullies and woolly twinsets (5) |
| JUMPERS | Garments worn with matching cardigans as twinsets (7) |
| PAIR | A brace of pheasants, couple of lovers, distich of lines, duo of rowers, duet of singers, dyad of gloves, flight of stairs, yoke of oxen or other two of a kind or twinset of equal things (4) |
| CARDIGAN | One of the two garments forming a twinset; or, a market town in Ceredigion whose castle was the location of the first eisteddfod (8) |
| TWOPIECE | A bikini, co-ord, suit or twinset consisting of a pair or combo of typically matching garments (3-5) |
| CARDIE | Components of a twinset, jumper and ... (abbrev.) |
| ENTWIST | Twinset, perhaps, to wrench out of shape (7) |
| OLDDEARS | Doddery, loaded with extreme riches, pearls and twinset brigade (3,5) |
| PAWNTICKETS | Pack twinset away in money lenders' receipts (4,7) |
| VALVE | Stopcock; mechanism of a trumpet, cornet or other brass instrument; leaf of a folding door; or, each of the halves of the hinged shell of a clam, mussel or oyster (5) |
| ILIUM | The uppermost and widest of the three bones constituting either of the lateral halves of the pelvis |
| TABLE | Slab for/with an inscription; one of the two halves of a backgammon board; or, a company of people seated for supper or a game (5) |
| HUBBIES | Other halves of better halves? (7) |
| HOHUM | Boring transposition of halves of humble home |
| DOUBLET | Jacket, not a twinset (7) |
| COCOA | Drink two halves of Coke with dash of Angostura |
| KERYGMA | Christian preaching lines at start of gospel in opposite halves of Luke and Mark (7) |
| NINEHOLES | Historic game, one of two halves of course (9) |
| LIMB | In archery, either of the halves of a recurve bow (4) |