| MIDPOINT | The location on a line segment equidistant from both ends (8) |
| EQUATOR | Imaginary line around the Earth, equidistant from both poles (7) |
| ENDPOINT | One of a line segment pair |
| TOPS | They go round the location on return (4) |
| ONED | Like a line segment, briefly |
| EQUATORS | Lines equidistant from planets' poles |
| PARALLEL | Like these line segments: // |
| CENTRE | Liqueur, ganache, praline or caramel filling in a chocolate; a player position in netball; or, the point in a circle equidistant from every point of its circumference (6) |
| SPHERE | Object bounded by a surface of which all points are equidistant from a centre, such as a soap bubble, orb, crystal ball, snow globe or Earth (6) |
| CIRCLE | Round plane whose boundary is equidistant from the centre (6) |
| EDIFICE | Building seen from both ends of the editor's office (7) |
| EDGE | Geometric line segment joining two vertices; dialect for a cliff; or, the sharp cutting side of a blade (4) |
| CHORD | Line segment joining two points on a circle |
| CARTESIANCOORDINATES | Such as (x,y) as a location on a graph |
| REGENTSTREET | Location on a standard UK Monopoly board immediately after the 'Go To Jail' corner space |
| AISLESEAT | Easy-access location on a plane or in a theatre |
| HADERA | Coastal city equidistant from Haifa and Tel Aviv - past its own time? (6) |
| FAROE | Danish islands equidistant from Iceland, Scotland, and Norway |
| PANDA | Herbivorous mammal from both ends of Polynesia (5) |
| AUTO | '___ train', loco and carriages capable of being driven from both ends (4) |