| CLOP | Sound from a hoof |
| LOP | Sound from a hoof |
| SHOE | U-shaped plate nailed to a hoof; or, a box from which playing cards are dealt in a casino (4) |
| PICK | A tool such as an awl for chipping ice, a hoof cleaner, a hammer for fossil hunting or a plectrum (4) |
| UNGULA | Technically, a hoof is a northerner's ear bent back under large body (6) |
| COLTSFOOT | Plant a hoof? (9) |
| HORSESHOE | U-shaped plate fitted to a hoof (9) |
| CLOVEN | Split or divided, as a hoof perhaps (6) |
| TOE | Forepart of a hoof |
| LOOFAH | Left a hoof out for cleaning item |
| RESHOE | Cover again, as a hoof |
| FROG | Creature found under a hoof (4) |
| FOOTROT | A hoof infection commonly found in sheep, goats and cattle (4,3) |
| DIVOT | Clump of lawn torn up by a pony's hoof during a game of polo or by a golf club during a stroke on a fairway (5) |
| OUTOFSCHOOL | Clout with a hoof so badly, you're not in lessons (3,2,6) |
| GROOM | Word, from "boy", for a stable hand, often brandishing a currycomb, dandy-brush, hoof pick and strapping pad, also unisexually called a lad (5) |
| ALE | Word for a beverage, feast or festival that, when coupled with bench, bush, cost, draper, hoof, house or wife, refers to a tavern pew, a hostelry sign, beer-flavouring costmary, an innkeeper, cat's-fo |
| ECHO | Each hoof oddly makes a reverberating sound (4) |
| FETLOCK | Part of a horse's leg where a tuft of hair grows above the hoof (7) |
| PASTERN | Part of a horse's foot from fetlock to hoof (7) |