| LEASH | Word among hunters for hares or hounds (5) |
| HORSEHAIR | Stuffing material for hare or his meal (9) |
| FLICK | Informal word for a cinema film; or, a group of hares or rabbits (5) |
| RELAY | A set of fresh horses or hounds to relieve others on a stage or a chase, hence a relief gang; or, a lap or leg of a race between teams of runners (5) |
| TRAPS | Word among jazz musicians for drums; gins; clay-pigeon-hurlers; bunkers on golf courses; or, stalls for greyhounds before races (5) |
| LEPUS | Latin or genus name for hares (5) |
| CONCH | Seashell used to make a musical instrument associated with Triton; half-dome of an apse; or, a word among chocolatiers for a mixer (5) |
| DROVE | A collective noun for hares (5) |
| RATCH | Gundog or hound that hunts by scent (5) |
| HOWLS | Makes the long plaintive cry characteristic of a wolf or hound (5) |
| GROOM | Brush horse or hound (5) |
| DINGO | Is it a dog or hound doing the rounds? (5) |
| FABLE | Aesop's The Tortoise And The Hare or The Frog And The Ox (5) |
| WORRY | Dog or hound |
| PORT | From the Latin for "haven" or "harbour", a city or town's anchorage; or, a word among mariners for a ship's left side, opposite starboard (4) |
| TRIP | Collective noun for hares, rabbits, or wildfowl; or, a jaunt (4) |
| BAIT | From Old Norse for "pasture, food" and "cut with the teeth", a word meaning set dogs on; chase/hunt with hawks or hounds; furnish a hook with a lure; provide a horse with provender on a journey; or, t |
| PAPERCHASE | Cross-country game in which "hounds" pursue a trail of confetti-like clippings strewn by "hares"; or, an administrative process of examining a trail of documents (5,5) |
| PARITY | From the Latin for "equal", a word among economists for equivalence in currency/rate of exchange, price, purchasing power, value or wages (6) |
| ABBS | Word among some weavers for woof- or weft-yarns (4) |