| GAIT | Walk or trot, for a horse |
| DECANTER | Slow down to a trot for a bottle of wine (8) |
| HARNESS | Races conducted at a pace or trot in which horses pull a sulky, ... racing |
| DANCE | Fox trot, for one |
| RACE | Turkey Trot, for example |
| RUN | Jog or trot |
| PRANCED | Walks or trots with high steps (7) |
| GALLERY | Word for a church porch originally, later a long balcony; a covered walk or passageway; a room for the exhibition of art; or, a collection of pictures (7) |
| PASSAGE | A dressage horse's slow sideways walk or elevated trot with legs raised high; or, a narrow hall or corridor through which to "pace, step" or go by (7) |
| STEP | Any one of the "pas" arranged in choreography; a pace generally; a foothold; a ladder rung; a mounting block; a short walk; or, a stair tread (4) |
| MALL | From the name of a historical alley in London for playing a croquet-like game, a shaded or sheltered walk; or, an enclosed shopping centre (4) |
| TURN | A revolution or spin; a change of direction; a walk; or, a spell of work (4) |
| EKKA | Word, from Hindi's "one", for a one-horse Indian carriage, saving a passenger from a walk or tiring run (4) |
| ALLEE | Depicted in a chestnut tree painting by Alfred Sisley, a French word for a tree-lined driveway, walk or path (5) |
| LEASH | A line or rope used to walk or control a dog or other animal (5) |
| SASHAY | An alteration of a French word for a gliding dance step that describes an ostentatious yet nonchalant walk or glide along; or, an excursion (6) |
| SNIPE | Known collectively as a walk or a wisp, a wading bird related to the woodcock found in marshes and wetlands (5) |
| FOOTPATH | Word for a pavement, trail, trottoir, walk or way for pedestrians only (8) |
| PLOD | A thud; a slow heavy walk; or, a dogged stroll in the manner of Toyland's guardian of the law (4) |
| VERB | "Walk" or "crawl" or "sink" or "swim" |