| SHOULDER | Part of the upper body containing the glenohumeral joint; or, an old word for a coathanger (8) |
| SCAPULA | Large flat triangular bone articulating with the clavicle at the acromioclavicular joint and the humerus at the glenohumeral joint (7) |
| SHRUG | An expressive raising of the shoulders; or, a bolero-like cardigan covering said glenohumeral joints (5) |
| CLOSETROD | Where to hang a coathanger |
| SEAHORSE | Fish with an equid-like head; the fabulous hippocampus; or, an old word for a hippo or a walrus (8) |
| ORDINARY | A penny-farthing; a simple heraldic charge ; or, an old word for an inn or a set-price meal provided (8) |
| LURCHERS | Greyhounds/sighthounds crossed with collies, terriers or other working dogs; or, an old word for skulkers waiting in concealment (8) |
| FOREARMS | Parts of the body containing the radius and ulna bones |
| VERTEBRA | A joint or segment of the spinal column (8) |
| NOBILITY | Boil tiny parts of the upper class (8) |
| RAMP | A slope; a swindle; a sleeping policeman; a mobile stairway; an upward bend in a handrail; wild garlic/leek; or, an old word for a tomboy (4) |
| ANKLE | Known in Latin as the tarsus, a region of the body containing the talus and talocrural joint (5) |
| COLL | Island of the Hebrides that inspired the fictional locale Struay in Mairi Hedderwick's Katie Morag series of children's books; or, an old word for an embrace or hug (4) |
| MYSTERY | Novel or whodunnit based on a puzzling crime; an enigmatic person; or, an old word for a craft or trade (7) |
| TRACT | In anatomy, a region of the body containing a system of organs or tissues serving a particular function (5) |
| SPEED | Rate of motion or action; each one of a bike's gear ratios; or, an old word for success or prosperity (5) |
| RECEIPT | Action of obtaining something; a counterfoil, proof of purchase or quittance; or, an old word for a culinary formula in cookery (7) |
| WIRE | A strand of metal; a snare made from this; filigree work; a piano string; or, an old word for a telephone (4) |
| THERM | From Greek for "heat", a unit of said energy; or, an old word for a bathing establishment, such as a hot bath (5) |
| CLAPPER | Tongue or striker of a bell; or, an old word for a rabbit hole (7) |