| SNAKEEYES | See sneaky throw of two ones with a pair of dice (5,4) |
| DEUCE | A dice throw of two, or a playing card with two pips |
| CRAPS | Gambling game using two dice in which a first throw of 7 or 11 wins and a first throw of 2, 3 or 12 loses (5) |
| MICCHECKS | Utterances of "One, two, one, two," and a phonetic clue to four features of this puzzle |
| DSTUDENTS | *Ones with a 1.0 GPA |
| GERMICIDE | It kills bugs in grime with a throw of the dice (9) |
| OBEDIENCE | Fact of doing as one's told could be one throw of the dice (9) |
| TOSS | An agitation of a salad, buck from one's horse, fling of a pancake, flip of a coin, hurl of a caber, throw of a person into the air by a bull or a restless turn (4) |
| TWO | Lowest possible roll with a pair of dice |
| DIE | One of a pair of dice |
| GRADUAL | Bit of an argument with backing of two, one by one? (7) |
| CAST | To contrive or send forth a magical spell; a rigid plaster of Paris shell; the dramatis personae of a drama or play; a throw of dice or anything else; or, a group of bees, crabs or falcons (4) |
| PIPS | 42 on a pair of dice |
| EITHER | One of two - one of two 8s |
| PUTT | Old word for a bumpkin or a greenhorn; a nap-like card game; a hurl or throw of a stone or a weight; or, a gentle stroke to roll a golf ball across the green, ideally into the hole (4) |
| SEPARATETABLES | Collective name of two one-act plays by Sir Terence Rattigan (8,6) |
| SEPARATE | --- Tables, collective name of two one-act plays by Terence Rattigan (8) |
| PURSESTRING | One of two one is tied to under female domination (5-6) |
| UTERQUE | Each (of two), one and the other |
| UTER | Which of two, one or the other |