| MAST | Sipport for a sail |
| LINE | A railway track; a wrinkle; a very narrow stripe; or, a rope such as a guy for a tent or a sheet for a sail (4) |
| HORSE | Equid whose name transferred to a chess knight, a clothes airer, an easel, a foot-rope, a sawbuck, a traveller for a sail's sheet and a vault (5) |
| SHEET | Unit of postage stamps off the press; literary word for a sail; or, a broad expanse of cloud or rain (5) |
| SPANKER | One who resorts to a smack for a sail (7) |
| BOATING | Going for a sail |
| ATRIP | Position for a sail or mast |
| HANK | Ring for a sail with Marvin? |
| ALIAS | Another name for a sail (5) |
| SPRIT | Ship spar sort for a sail |
| CREPE | Another name for a sail (5) |
| CRUISE | Old oil vessel in which I go for a sail |
| VANE | Flat part on either side of a feather; a sail of a windmill; or, a short word for a weathercock for indicating the wind's direction (4) |
| BATTEN | A lath for securing a tarpaulin over a ship's hatchway; a flexible insert in a sail; a row of stage lights; or, the bar/pipe supporting them (6) |
| BUNT | Baggy centre of a sail or net; a push with horns; a gentle tap of a pitched baseball; or, a manoeuvre in which a pilot draws a half circle in the sky (4) |
| CLEW | Old word for a ball of yam; thread as a guide out of a maze/labyrinth; lower corner of a sail; or, one of the cords by which a hammock is suspended (4) |
| SWEEP | Another word for the steerer of a dragon boat; a sail or vane of a windmill; or, a chimney cleaner (5) |
| HOIST | Height of a sail; a lifting device such as a crane, halyard, pulley or teagle; or, a set of signal flags (5) |
| YARDARM | End of a beam supportA-ing a sail on the mast of a square-rigger (7) |
| SAMPAN | Small boats used in China and Japan rowed with a scull from the stern and often with a sail and a small cabin |