| HORIZONTAL | Parallel to the ground (10) |
| PLANCHE | Gymnastics stability exercise in which the body is held parallel to the ground (7) |
| LEVERHANG | Gymnastics rings position held with the body parallel to the ground |
| SIDEARMER | One who throws in a manner roughly parallel to the ground |
| CLOTHESLINE | Move in professional wrestling in which a wrestler runs toward another extending an arm out parallel to the ground (11) |
| HORIZONTALLY | In a way that is parallel to the ground (12) |
| CORDILLERA | Chain of mountain systems parallel to the Pacific coast extending from Alaska to Cape Horn (8,10) |
| FASTIGIATE | In botany (of a tree), having the branches more or less parallel to the main stem |
| PLATITUDES | They're parallel to the equator |
| TAURUS | Mountain range in southern Turkey that runs parallel to the Mediterranean coast. It extends along a curve from Lake Egridir in the west to the upper reaches of the Euphrates River in the east. (6) |
| TROPIC | Torrid zone / either of the two small circles of the celestial sphere on each side of and parallel to the equator which the sun reaches at its greatest declination north or south |
| ULNA | Bone parallel to the radius in the forearm which articulates with the trochlea of the humerus (4) |
| HADRAMAUT | Region in east-central Yemen, on the Gulf of Aden, made up of a hilly area near the coast and an inland valley occupied by a seasonal watercourse, the Wadi Hadramawt, that runs parallel to the coast b |
| AMERICAN | Chain of mountain systems parallel to the Pacific coast extending from Alaska to Cape Horn (8,10) |
| ARCTICCIRCLE | Imaginary line around the earth parallel to the equator that separates the North Temperate and North Frigid Zones (6,6) |
| ULNAR | Of the arm bone parallel to the radius |
| STRAND | Street in London parallel to the Thames, site of Somerset House and the Courtauld Gallery (6) |
| LATITUDE | An imaginary line around the Earth parallel to the equator (8) |
| ZERAVSHAN | Mountain range in Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. It extends for more than 230 miles (370 km) east-west parallel to the Turkistan Range, and many of its peaks rise more than 16,500 feet (5,000 metres), the |
| WHARF | Platform built parallel to the waterfront at a harbour for the docking, loading and unloading of ships |