| STOCKCARS | Ordinary vehicles strengthened for a form of racing with collisions (5,4) |
| STOCKCAR | A vehicle strengthened and modified for a form of racing in which participants often collide (5,3) |
| QUADS | Muscles strengthened for the Boston Marathon, say |
| OSCARS | Ordinary vehicles obtain special awards (6) |
| CLASH | Be violently at odds with collision from right to left (5) |
| DECOUPAGE | French word for a form of decorative art based on gluing paper cut-outs to wooden boxes, trays, frames, chests of drawers ... (9) |
| NUTRITION | Hazel's allowance - one used for a form of sustenance |
| GARDENING | General name for a form of horticulture practiced by Gertrude Jekyll, Humphrey Repton, Vita SackvilleWest and Rosemary Verey (9) |
| CHASER | A hunter; a horse used for a form of point-to-point originally raced between church steeples; a type of dragonfly; or, a shot of liqueur taken after a pint of beer, for example (6) |
| CAREERING | Racing with caution on essentially dangerous circuit (9) |
| ENTEREDIN | Typed, as data for a form |
| SNAILS | Terrestrial gastropod molluscs used in a form of racing (6) |
| PETIT | Word linking with "point" for a form of needlework, "four" for a bite-size biscuit or "pain" for a small bread roll (5) |
| STEP | A simple dance move; the short name for a form of aerobics; or, a foothold cut into a slope of ice by a climber (4) |
| DAMASK | Short word for a form of sword blade steel with a wavy pattern; or, an originally hand-woven reversible brocade-like silk textile with a pattern of animals, flowers, fruit etc (6) |
| FTR | Sporty model from Indian based on a form of racing that would only give it away by the initials if we told you... (3) |
| SPEEDSKATING | A form of racing on ice, usually on an oval course, against other competitors or the clock (5,7) |
| TREAD | Word preceding "mill" for a form of Victorian prison punishment or for a device for a modern gym workout (5) |
| SUMATRA | Where to get a lot of money for a form of art? (7) |
| ASIDE | Words linking with "five" for a form of football played with small teams (1-4) |