| LINAGE | Number of lines in a piece of printed or written material (6) |
| LINES | Former name of the units of magnetic flux known as maxwells; ancestral or chronological sequences of people; rows of printed or written words; or, railway tracks (5) |
| OCR | Electronic conversion of printed or written text |
| DODGES | One avoiding a piece of printed matter |
| HANDOUT | A piece of printed information provided for free, often with a talk or to advertise something (7) |
| TYPO | Error made in the typing of printed or electronic material (4) |
| STANZA | Similar to a paragraph in prose or a verse in a song, a xed number of lines forming the building block of a poem (6) |
| CREASE | Any of a number of lines on a cricket pitch (bowling, popping, or return) marked to define the positions of the bowler and batsman (6) |
| RUBRIC | Heading or initial letter in a manuscript printed or painted in red ink (6) |
| CACHET | In philately, a design printed or stamped on mail, especially for commemorative purposes (6) |
| URTEXT | The earliest version of a piece of written material (6) |
| REFRAIN | A repeated line or number of lines in a poem or song (7) |
| CALICO | Plain cotton textile on which chintz in traditionally printed or used to make Indian shamiana tents (6) |
| LEAFED | Looked through a book or other written material (6) |
| SESTET | Italian sonnet's "resolution," named for the number of lines it contains |
| EDITOR | Person who edits written material for a publication (6) |
| READING | Action of interpreting printed or written words; a narration; knowledge of literature; or, the study of books (7) |
| FOURTEEN | The number of lines in a sonnet (8) |
| DIGEST | Think over collection of written material (6) |
| THREE | Number of lines in a haiku |