| WING | One of the flight- or lift producing appendages of a bat, bee, beetle, bird or butterfly (4) |
| INSECT | Word, from "cut up, incise", for a segmented arthropod, such as a bee, beetle or butterfly (6) |
| ICHOR | Singers give one a lift, producing this divine stuff |
| LAND | To guide a plane safely to the ground, as a pilot does at the end of the flight (or a plot of property) |
| COCKROACH | Beetle, bird and fish (9) |
| PINION | Small cogwheel that engages with a larger rack; or, one of the flight-feathers or remiges of a bird's wing (6) |
| ADNEXA | In anatomy, the appendages of a particular organ |
| STAIR | One of the flight |
| LANDING | Top of the flight - or the end? |
| PEACOCK | Bird (or butterfly?) (7) |
| RESIDENT | Animal, bird or butterfly that does not migrate; house physician; registered hotel guest; or, a diplomaticrepresentative at a foreign court (8) |
| BUMP | A jolt; a swelling; a sleeping policeman; a knock of a boat in a rowing race; or, a customary throw or lift in the air of a birthday boy or girl (4) |
| FANG | From Old Norse for "capture, grasp", a word for booty or spoils first, later a sharp tooth of a bat, dog, snake or wolf, that catches and holds (4) |
| SETA | Bristly appendage of a plant; the top class? (4) |
| TOES | Appendages of the foot |
| FINS | Appendages of elfin size? (4) |
| AWNS | Bristle-like appendages of certain grasses |
| PATAGIUM | Originally the golden edging of a Roman lady's tunic, today the wing-membrane of a bat or the gliding skin of a flying squirrel (8) |
| TAIL | Elongated appendage of an animal (4) |
| LIMB | Jointed appendage of an animal (4) |