| STAGNANT | (Of water) standing still; without flow or current (8) |
| WINDSURFER | One who sails over water standing on a narrow board and holding onto a sail (10) |
| RHEO | Prefix meaning flow or current, esp. in electrical context (4-) |
| STAGNATE | Cease to flow or move (8) |
| ECSTATIC | Civil Engineer standing still, enraptured (8) |
| HOMETOWN | Place of one's birth or current fixed residence |
| MOBILITY | Are you still without it? (8) |
| BADBLOOD | Animosity; or, current Taylor Swift song: 2 wds. |
| RHYTHM | Describing beat, cadence, flow or tempo in music or a harmonious sequence of colours or elements in art, one of the longest words in the English dictionary without vowels (6) |
| STRIKE | Anglo-Saxon word for "to go or flow" or "to rub lightly" that came to mean a hit; an attack by aircraft; a raid; a find, as in gold, luck or oil; or, a downing of work tools in protest (6) |
| RUNDRY | Of a well or river, to cease to flow or have any water (3,3) |
| RUSH | A swift forward movement; a stampede; a sudden demand, burst of activity, flood/flow or euphoric thrill; or, a flock of pochards (4) |
| STAGNATES | (Of water) becomes brackish and foul from standing still (9) |
| DAM | A barrier constructed to contain the flow or water or to keep out the sea. |
| DIGEST | A synopsis or summary of news or current literature (6) |
| STASES | Stoppage of flow or circulation (6) |
| EROSION | In geology, the process caused by wind, water flow or other natural elements, also called denudation |
| TESLA | Kind of coil or current |
| RIP | Kind of cord or current |
| GUSH | A sudden copious flow or emission (4) |