| BIVALVE | Mollusc with a hinged shell (7) |
| BOXTURTLE | Reptile with a hinged shell |
| OSTRACOD | Minute aquatic crustacean with a hinged shell (8) |
| CLAM | It has a hinged shell |
| SCALLOP | Edible shellfish with a pair of hinged shells (7) |
| PADLOCK | A portable lock with a hinged shackle used to secure a door etc. by passing it through a staple |
| OTTOMAN | Low piece of furniture with a hinged seat, forming a storage space (7) |
| HASPING | Fastening with a hinged metal plate and a bolt |
| TANKARD | Beer mug with a hinged lid (7) |
| ABALONE | Large mollusc with a shell lined with mother-of-pearl |
| 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) |
| HUNTER | Type of pocket watch with a hinged lid; a brand of wellington boot; or, Scottish anatomist considered a founder of scientific surgery (6) |
| BUCKLE | A clasp with a hinged pin used for joining a belt's ends (6) |
| LAPTOP | A portable computer with a hinged screen (6) |
| STEIN | A large beer mug, often with a hinged lid (5) |
| BIVALVES | Mollusks with hinged shells (8) |
| OYSTER | Shellfish with two rough, hinged shells called shucks (6) |
| VALVES | From the Latin for "folding doors", the hinged shell halves of clams, cockles, mussels, oysters, scallops and other pelecypods (6) |
| TRAPDOORSPIDER | Arachnid that constructs a burrow with a hinged entrance made of soil, vegetation and silk |
| HATCHWAYS | Openings with a hinged or sliding door in a deck, floor, wall or roof (9) |