| WAISTLINE | Intersection of the bodice and skirt of a dress (9) |
| CRINOLINE | Hooped petticoat used to expand the skirt of a dress (9) |
| POLONAISE | Bodice and skirt in one piece (9) |
| EVENINGDRESS | Smoothing bodice and skirt for formal wear (7,5) |
| PLENUM | Enclosed chamber containing pressurised air, as contained within the skirt of a hovercraft (6) |
| MIDI | Skirt of a sort |
| KILT | Skirt of a sort |
| TAIL | Either of the two tapering "skirts" of a morning coat; descending stroke of a Q; or, the foot of a book (4) |
| CUBA | Largest and westernmost island of the West Indies, located at the intersection of the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea (4) |
| CROSSING | A voyage across a body of water; or, the intersection of the transepts and nave in a church (8) |
| SEPARATES | Blouses and skirts (9) |
| TRIHEDRON | Figure determined by the intersection of three planes |
| FLECHE | Slender spire rising from the intersection of the nave and transept of a Gothic church; French, 'arrow' (6) |
| DIAGRAM | Venn ---, a representation of sets of information, showing common elements within the intersections of the circles (7) |
| 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) |
| ORIGIN | Intersection of the x-axis and y-axis |
| FIJI | Intersection of the categories "Country" and "Water company" |
| STAYS | Historically, strips of whalebone or other material used to stiffen the bodice of a corset of the same name (5) |
| TUTU | With several depicted in The Dance Class by Edgar Degas, a ballerina's costume that incorporates a satin bodice and a netted/tulle skirt (4) |
| MEET | The congregation of riders and hounds before a hunt; a competitive event in track-and-field athletics or swimming; or, in mathematics, the intersection of two lines (4) |