| REARED | Rose up on the hind legs |
| AXL | Rose up on the stage |
| REARS | Rises up on the hind legs |
| REAR | Rise up on the hind legs |
| RARED | Rose on the hind legs, with "up" |
| REARUP | Stand on the hind legs, as a horse |
| RARESUP | Stands on the hind legs, in dialect |
| RAMPANT | Spreading unchecked a€“ standing on the hind legs (7) |
| SCOPA | Brush-like tuft of hairs on the hind legs of bees used for collecting pollen (5) |
| UDDER | The mammary gland of female cattle, sheep, goats, horses, and related animals, having two or more teats and hanging between the hind legs of the animal |
| PRANCE | Related to "lively spirited horse" and "in full splendour", word meaning bound from the hind legs, high-step or spring, as in the aforesaid pony or steed; or, to caper, cavort, frisk, gambol, skip or |
| CHEWTHEFAT | Talk the hind leg off a donkey when the butter arrives after the champ (4,3,3) |
| HOCK | Joint in the hind leg of a quadruped between the knee and fetlock, corresponding to the human ankle (4) |
| INSTEP | In horses, the hind leg from the ham to the pastern joint (6) |
| PIGROOT | Of a horse, kick upwards with the hind legs (3-4) |
| SILVERSIDE | Boned joint of beef cut from the top part of the hind leg (10) |
| NAG | Talk the hind leg off a horse? (3) |
| NURSE | ' The priest continues what the ___ began' (John Dryden The Hind and the Panther (1687) |
| DRYDEN | Writer of the 1687 poem The Hind and the Panther (6) |
| BIGTOE | The innermost digit of the hind foot (3,3) |