- SIDES
- Opposing teams
- Factions
- Debate team positions
- Fast-food extras
- Partners (with)
- Vegetables, often
- Fighting factions
- 7" halves
- Teams
- They get chosen up
- Entree add-ons
- Fries, slaw, chips, etc.
- Fries, salad, etc.
- Fries, slaw, and such
- Facets
- Viewpoints
- What opponents take
- A and B, e.g.
- A and B, in records
- Triangle trio
- Blue and Gray
- Combatants
- Polygons have them
- Debate teams
- Identifies (with)
- Aligns with
- Squares have four
- Every quarrel has two
- Slaws and salads
- Kids might choose them
- Go-with dishes
- Slaw and fries
- Square's four
- Aligns oneself (with)
- Record's two
- Pentagon quintet
- A and B, on LPs
- Parts of lunch combos
- Cucumber salad, coconut rice, etc.
- Faces
- Heads and tails
- Agrees (with)
- Fries, tots, slaw, etc.
- Joni Mitchell's "Both __ Now"
- Contesting teams
- Fries and slaw
- Versions
- Shows partiality
- They're taken by opponents
- What partisans choose
- Teams in a game
- Us and "Them"
- Slaw, fries, etc.
- Two __ to every story
- Them and "us"
- Polygonal bounds
- Contest opponents
- A triangle has three of them
- Large beef quantities
- Competitors
- Meat-locker inventory
- Meat-locker units
- Fries and onion rings
- Supports, with "with"
- Dispute principals
- Fries, rice, veggies, etc.
- What partisans take
- Phases
- Contest contingents
- French fries and rice, for short
- Banks as boundaries
- Opposite aspects of an issue
- Options with entrées
- Teams in a contest
- Competing teams
- They're chosen in schoolyards
- Portions on a steak plate
- Song releases, in the music business
- Right and left.
- Opponents take them
- Square foursome
- Hexagon sextet
- 45 halves
- Flanks.
- Lateral surfaces.
- Parties.
- Henry James' "Washington Square" has four.
- Aligns oneself.
- Contesting parties.
- Opposing parties.
- Pro and con.
- Laterals.
- Heptagons have seven.
- Left and right.
- Lines of descent.
- Outer surfaces of an object.
- What every question has two of.
- See 7 Across.
- Aspects.
- Heads or tails.
- Actors' lines: Slang.
- Parties in a contest.
- Hill parts
- Take ___
- Record parts
- Rectangle parts
- Partisan positions
- Rectangles have four
- Takes a stand
- Wings
- A CUBE HAS SIX
- A dodecahedron has 12
- Properties of a square
- Hexagon's sextet
- Parts of a square
- A decagon has 10
- Square's properties
- A cube's sextet
- Opponents
- Bodies of partisans
- Allies (with)
- Walls
- Borders
- Edges
- Deliveries to a butcher
- They may be chosen
- Two for the record
- Cole slaw and fries
- Beans and others
- Debaters take them
- French fries and coleslaw, often
- Pros and cons, e.g.
- Meal parts
- Cube's six
- Extreme "III ___ to Every Story"
- '70 Willie Nelson album "Both ___ Now"
- Argument positions
- Issue halves
- French fries, coleslaw, etc.
- Beans and greens
- Beans and greens, e.g.
- The "three" at a meat-and-three joint
- Debate positions
- The offense and the defense
- Things taken at a sporting event
- Boundaries
- Opposing positions
- Bounding lines
- Combative factions
- Octagon features
- Things taken at sporting events?
- Onion rings and such
- A and B, for a record
- Corn bread and coleslaw, often
- Hit that isn't head-on
- 12, for a dodecagon
- They're taken during a feud
- Actors' lines
- Pentagon features
- Surfaces
- These are taken in an argument
- Fries and slaw, among others
- Skins and shirts
- Fries and slaw, for two
- Entree go-withs
- Polygon parts
- Rhombus's four
- Beans and fries, e.g.
- Dishes that go with mains
- Triangle's three
- Neither top nor bottom
- Some dishes
- Order specifications
- Sextet for most dice
- Square quartet
- Fries and onion rings, e.g. (10,5)
- Octagon octet
- Slaw and fries, e.g.