| ALAR | Of a wing |
| FLUTTER | A polysemous word for a modest wager or bet; a heartbeat; a flap of a wing; a bat of one's eyelashes; a sensation or stir; a group of butterflies or flags; or, a fairy formation (7) |
| FLAP | A cat's miniature door; a throw of an American pancake; a flutter of a wing; or, a large broad mushroom (4) |
| COVERT | A secret shelter for game; a feather concealing the quill-bases of a wing's frame; or, a flock of the wild rails that are synonymous with bald or inane (6) |
| SQUIRREL | Flying ____, rodent that glides with the aid of a wing-like membrane of skin (8) |
| TOE | Tip of a wing tip shoe |
| FEATHER | Terror around the structure of a wing |
| ELL | Shape of a wing |
| AILERON | Part of a wing (7) |
| DELTA | Shape of a wing, perhaps (5) |
| AEROFOIL | Cross section of a wing or tailplane (8) |
| ALA | In the style of a wing-like process when joined up (1,2) |
| HIHI | Two-thirds of a Wings hit |
| MULLOFKINTYRE | Argyll and Bute peninsula, subject of a Wings song (4,2,7) |
| AISLE | A wing of a church separated from the nave by piers; a passageway in a supermarket or between rows of seats; or, a compartment of a timber-framed barn divided from the main body of the building by pos |
| SAIL | A wing of a ship/hawk, whip of a mill or a petal of a flower of any of the peas, each to catch the wind or breeze (4) |
| ROTOR | A circumvolving part in a dynamo, generator or turbine; the winder of a clockwork watch; a wing of a helicopter; or, a violent lee eddy associated with turbulence (5) |
| PENNON | From the Latin for "feather", a flag, such as a medieval knight's personal ensign or a streamer attached to a lance; or, a poetic word for a wing (6) |
| VAN | A winnowing basket; a windmill sail; a wing; a shovel for testing ore; a cargo truck; or, a house on wheels (3) |
| IFEELSO | "I haven't seen a crocus or a rosebud; Or a robin on a wing; But ... gay in a melancholy way; That i |