| HAME | Stable gear consisting of either of two curved supports that are attached to the collar of a draft horse and that hold the traces. |
| LEASH | Strap attached to the collar of a dog (5) |
| GIRTH | Stable gear consisting of a band around a horse's belly (5) |
| ASPEN | Type of tree in which the leaves are attached to the stem by long flattened stalks so that they quiver in the wind (5) |
| BRASSES | What flat ornaments are attached to the harnesses of draught horses? (7) |
| SWING | __ vote (selection of either of two candidates) |
| RELATIVITY | Theory of - - -, either of two concepts developed by Albert Einstein (10) |
| ARCTICCIRCLE | A lot of credit for intersecting two curved shapes in parallel |
| POMMEL | In gymnastics, a type of vaulting horse fitted with two curved handles (6) |
| POMMELHORSE | A flat apparatus fitted with two curved handgrips on which gymnasts swing their body (6,5) |
| OXBOW | A horseshoe bend or meander in a river, named for its resemblance to the U-shape of the collar of a yoke (2-3) |
| ROCKER | Either of a pair of curved supports mounted on the bottom or a cradle or type of chair (6) |
| NEAP | Of either of the two lowest and smallest tides occurring at the quarters of the moon |
| RAGLAN | Name a loose overcoat, the sleeves of which are cut so as to continue up to the collar (6) |
| URSA | Latin word forming part of the names of either of the two Bear constellations (4) |
| TACK | A fastening such as a basting stitch, drawing pin, nail, stud, tingle or a rope for securing a sail; food, as in a hard ship biscuit; or, bridles, saddlery and other stable gear collectively (4) |
| STUD | It holds the collar of a breeding stallion (4) |
| LAPPET | An old name for the dog collar of a clergyman; or, a jar for conserves, preserves, jellies and the like (6) |
| PENNIFORM | Feather-shaped, as of muscles whose fibres (fascicles) are attached to either side of a central tendon (9) |
| ENAMOR | Object that might be the first half of either of the hidden words (6) |