| GRIDLINE | Part of a lattice on a graph |
| ESPALIER | Lattice on which to train trees |
| GRID | A back-formation of a word for a metal cooking frame, used to describe a lattice, mesh or network of intersecting horizontal/vertical lines; or, the face, particularly when lined (4) |
| PORTCULLIS | A sliding door or grating that is lowered in the gateway of a castle; or, in heraldry, a lattice (10) |
| METAL | Sometimes described as a lattice in a sea of electrons, an elementary substance with good electrical and thermal conductivity, such as brass, copper, gold, silver or zinc (5) |
| NELIS | A winter pear's name that rhymes with a word for a lattice or espalier (5) |
| MANDALA | Geometrical design overlapping a kolam and a lattice (7) |
| GRILLE | A lattice or screen used to enclose or protect a window (6) |
| MESHWORK | An interlaced structure such as fret, netting, a lattice, tracery or a web (4-4) |
| WOVEN | Like a lattice piecrust |
| FACILITATE | Promote a lattice, if pressed (10) |
| LINZER | ___ torte (pastry with a lattice design) |
| PIE | After-dinner treat that might have a lattice-top crust |
| TRELLIS | Still re-assembled a lattice-work structure (7) |
| CRISSCROSS | Move or be arranged in a lattice pattern |
| PIES | Desserts with a lattice crust |
| PEAK | The highest point of a curve on a graph (4) |
| CIRCLE | On a graph, the full set of solutions to x squared plus y squared equals a constant value |
| AXIS | Line of reference on a graph |
| CARTESIANCOORDINATES | Such as (x,y) as a location on a graph |