- - Not take a stance on
- - One who's on the fence
- - Fence-sitter's position
- - Mugwump's stance
- - Take an attitude over something that's beneath you
- - pair surmounting obstacle to form band
- - Ride astride
- - To sit or stand with one leg on either side of something
- - Position legs over edges of tear in seat
- - Put one foot on either side of
- - Getting stand with legs well spaced, led off with violin
- - Sit on a horse
- - go across street — basic reason for mix-up
- - Lumber covers frame on Tower Bridge
- - sit on, as a motorcycle
- - Separate legs, taking seat across sides of tractor
- - have one leg each side of
- - Stand astride
- - Sit as on a horse
- - Led darts (anag)
- - Extend over a certain area
- - Be situated on both sides of
- - Be astride
- - Sit astride
- - Go across step half missing on rickety ladder
- - Stand across
- - Lie on both sides of
- - Sit astride of
- - Bestride
- - Take both sides?
- - Go across street with right turn
- - Get across half of tree amidst lumber
- - Gymnastic exercise with a leg on either side of parallel bars
- - Sit on, as a horse
- - Trade LSD freely to favour both sides
- - Sit on the fence with fiddle, led astray?
- - What fence-sitters do?
- - Favor both sides
- - Fence-sit
- - Favor both sides of an issue
- - Not choose one side or the other
- - Not pick sides?
- - Sit astride (a horse)
- - Be noncommital on an issue
- - Hedge on an issue
- - Play both sides
- - Sit on the fence
- - Be noncommittal on an issue
- - Hedge: Colloq.
- - Appear to take both sides of (an issue).
- - Equivocal position: Colloq.
- - Refuse to commit oneself: Colloq.
- - Appear to favor both sides: Colloq.
- - Appear to favor both sides of: Colloq.
- - Extend over
- - Mount
- - Extend across
- - Equivocate
- - Span
- - high jump technique that dominated the sport before the fosbury flop
- - Sit with the legs wide apart
- - jump right back in the saddle
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