| BANDOLEER | Shoulder belt and trunk a monarch placed outside |
| STREAMER | Flag of monarch placed by watercourse (8) |
| BARK | A word for the abrupt cry of a dog; the tannin-rich covering of a tree trunk; a poetic word for a boat; or, fruit-and-nut-topped chocolate broken into jagged pieces |
| HARPY | In Greek myths, a ravenous creature with a woman's head and trunk and a bird's wings and claws (5) |
| MERMAID | Imaginary sea creature with a head and trunk of a woman and the tail of a fish |
| LOG | A fallen tree trunk; a bulky piece of firewood; pertaining to said timber's shape or inertia, a rolled roulade-like cake; or, a blockhead (3) |
| BULK | Word for the belly, body or trunk; a ship's cargo or hold; a heap of tobacco; a mass generally; the thickness of paper or a book; the greater part; or, dietary fibre/roughage in food (4) |
| SCABBARD | Sheath for a bladed weapon such as a sword or bayonet, traditionally suspended from a shoulder belt called a baldric (8) |
| CREEPER | A bird that runs or spirals up and down tree trunks; a daisy-cutter in cricket; or, a vine such as the clematis, periwinkle or woodbine |
| AXIL | Angle between branch and trunk of a tree (4) |
| RAFT | Drift of fallen tree trunks; a flock of floating penguins or puffins; a group of resting otters; or, a flat boat made of logs, such as Kon-Tiki (4) |
| TORSO | Grotesque roots and trunk (5) |
| HIPS | Joints between leg and trunk |
| BANDOLIER | Shoulder belt for carrying bullets (9) |
| BALDRIC | Shoulder belt N. Armstrong's fellow astronaut clipped around (7) |
| BALTICSEA | Body of water that drains into the Kattegat via the A˜resund, the Great Belt and the Little Belt |
| CODPIECE | It's below the belt and sounds a bit fishy! (8) |
| UNBUCKLES | Unfastened belt and clued bunk a different way (9) |
| RAMADAN | Sheep gets a belt, and fast (7) |
| CUFFLINK | A gent may wear this belt and tie (4,4) |