| NIMBLE | Printers measure an arm or a leg then compare it with 23 across (6) |
| PLAYBINGO | Bet on brilliant leader breaking leg, then try to gamble with numbers (4,5) |
| LIKEN | Compare it with elk in the making of it (5) |
| MIXED | and 4: Fine legs, then? Some doubt emerges! (5,8) |
| LIMBER | Take an arm or a leg -hesitate - and it becomes flexible (6) |
| MEMBER | Does it cost an arm or a leg to be one? (6) |
| SEAMER | In cricket, a bowler who may deliver an off cutter or a leg cutter delivery (6) |
| JIGGLE | Dance with bad leg, so move jerkily (6) |
| ENSIGN | Small measure - an omen for the junior officer (6) |
| LIMB | In a pound weight I'm giving an arm or a leg (4) |
| CAMEMBERT | Extremes of cost, about an arm or a leg, for cheese (9) |
| LIMN | How to draw an arm or a leg, one is told (4) |
| AMPUTATE | Cut off an arm or a leg (8) |
| FLIPPER | A paddle-like limb of a dolphin, penguin, seal or turtle; or, something reminiscent of this, such as a hand, a pinball arm or a swim fin (7) |
| YARD | Describing an arm or a number of feet (4) |
| MOTTO | Phrase accompanying a coat of arms; or, a maxim or scrap of verse in a fortune cookie or paper cracker (5) |
| AREOLAR | Arm cut or a leg cut, perhaps, relating to a sensitive area (7) |
| GIGOT | From "small fiddle", word for a leg of lamb; or, a leg-of-mutton sleeve (5) |
| CLAW | Seagulls have long wings, strong bills, webbed feet, a round or square shaped tail, and a small ___ halfway up the lower leg so they can attach to high ledges |
| TOADEGREE | In some measure an undergraduate's progress (2,1,6) |