| WOODPILE | It may be a cord |
| BARCODE | Pricing symbol could be a cord (3-4) |
| BROCADE | Raised fabric which might have been woven to be a cord |
| LANYARD | Any involvement in fat can be a cord round one's neck (7) |
| KNOT | A tie in a cord, lace, ribbon or rope; a clump or cluster; a lump; a tangle; an intricate flower-bed; or, a rosette (4) |
| NETSUKE | A small toggle, often in the form of a carved ivory or wood figure, used to secure a purse or container suspended on a cord from a kimono sash (7) |
| LACE | From "noose", a cord such as a shoestring or a corset's rat-tail; an ornamental braid; fine openwork of cotton or silk; or, unrelatedly, a dash of brandy added to a coffee/drink (4) |
| BEAD | A hole to allow it to be threaded on a cord, whilst is the Nertera granadensis ___ plant! (4) |
| IRON | It has a cord and a board |
| SKIPPINGROPE | A cord with handles at each end, used as a toy or a piece of exercise equipment (8,4) |
| BULLROARER | A thin wooden slat on a cord, used as a musical instrument and signalling device |
| DIABOLO | A game in which one throws and catches a spinning top on a cord fastened to two sticks (7) |
| TENDON | A cord of fibrous tissue attaching a muscle to a bone or other structure (6) |
| DRAWSTRING | A cord in a casing or threaded through material by which the material can be gathered up (10) |
| PULL | Amount of resistance on a bowstring; or, a cord/tassel formerly used to ring a servant's bell (4) |
| WICK | Old or dialect word for a creek, farm, hamlet or village; or, a cord that supplies fuel to a candle or oil lamp's flame by capillary action (4) |
| PURL | Warmed spiced wormwood ale; a knitting stitch; a cord of twisted gold or silver wire; an ornamental loop or picot on the edge of a ribbon; an eddy or ripple; or, the babble, bubble, burble, gurgle or |
| GASKET | Mechanical seal recalled in an expression synonymous with "blow a fuse"; or, a cord securing a furled sail (6) |
| STERE | About a quarter of a cord |
| PULLEY | Wheel with a grooved rim for a cord |