| PRONGS | Tines of a fork |
| PRONG | One of the tines of a fork; or, by extension, each of two or three parts of an attack or operation (5) |
| STAB | Pierce as with the tines of a fork |
| TOOTH | One of the tines of a comb; or, a projection of a cog, gearwheel or saw (5) |
| TREY | A set of three; a playing card or die with a value between deuce and cater; the third tine of a stag's antler; or, a threepenny bit (4) |
| POINT | A tine of a red stag's antler (5) |
| BEZ | Second tine of a deer's horn (3) |
| BROW | The top of a hill; a gallery in a colliery; a gangway from a ship to the shore; the first point/tine of an antler; or, one's forehead or supercilium (4) |
| FORK | Zigzag of lightning; an acoustic resonator; a type of double attack in chess; or, an item with tines which forms part of a canteen (4) |
| SNAG | Australian "banger"; a drawback; a pulled thread in a jumper/stocking; a short tine; or, a tree stump (4) |
| RAKE | Garden tool with a row of tines (4) |
| LIGHTNING | "My tines be long. My tines be short. My tines end ere my first report ..." |
| STAG | A 'switch' is one with no tines at the top of its antlers (4) |
| ANTLERS | Tines form a part of them, sternal in form (7) |
| PEA | Veggie on a vine or a tine |
| PITCHFORK | A long-handled agricultural tool with curved tines for lifting or turning hay or straw (9) |
| INSET | Tines imbedded in the corner of the map (5) |
| HEYDAY | Colour rises in crop - it's the best of tines (6) |
| SPIKES | Sharp pointed nails, prongs or tines to which ears of corn and lavender inflorescences are likened (6) |
| PEAS | Vegetables that might be speared with individual fork tines |