| NEOPAGANS | Members of modern religious movements such as Wicca |
| PAGANISM | Spiritual paths such as Wicca (8) |
| TEDIUM | Religious movement's topics regularly cited in dull retrospective (6) |
| STIMMING | Repetition of self-calming movements, such as finger-tapping or hair-twirling |
| CHOREOGRAPHER | Person who arranges dance movements, such as Busby Berkeley (13) |
| CHOREOLOGY | The study and notation of ballet and dance movement, such as that of the Benesh discipline for example (10) |
| BALLROOM | Area, for example, in a large country house or manor for terpsichorean movements such as the waltz, foxtrot, tango and quickstep (8) |
| RSI | Painful condition caused by prolonged repetitive movements such as typing or decorating. (1,1,1) |
| ADAGIO | In music, a slow movement, such as in "___ for Strings" by Samuel Barber (6) |
| TRACTARIAN | A High Church Anglican in the Oxford Movement such as John Henry Newman or Edward Bouverie Pusey (10) |
| SCHOOL | Intellectual or creative movement, such as the Frankfurt in social theory or the Chicago in architecture (6) |
| ADAGIETTO | A slow musical movement such as the famous one from Mahler's Fifth Symphony featured in Luchino Visconti's film Death in Venice |
| GRIMOIRE | Magical textbook or collection of spells, e.g. a Book of Shadows used in Wicca (8) |
| SECTS | Divisions of Wicca, e.g. |
| PAGAN | Adherent of Wicca, eg (5) |
| WICCAN | Practitioner of wicca (6) |
| ALDER | Birch family tree that's sacred in Wicca |
| RASTA | Member of the religious movement in which the Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie is viewed as an incarnation of God |
| RASTAFARI | Of a member of a West Indian religious movement (9) |
| PAGANRELIGION | Wicca, e.g. |