Female column has no right to carry commercial about IT stuff (8)
I believe the answer is:
caryatid
'female column has no right' is the definition.
I know that both 'female' and 'column' relate to this answer.
'carry commercial about it stuff' is the wordplay.
'carry' becomes 'cary' (I can't explain this - if you can you should believe this answer much more).
'commercial' becomes 'ad' (abbreviation for advertisement).
'about' indicates anagramming the letters.
'stuff' is an insertion indicator.
'it' anagrammed gives 'ti'.
'ad' going around 'ti' is 'atid'.
'cary'+'atid'='CARYATID'
'to' acts as a link.
Can you help me to learn more?
(Other definitions for caryatid that I've seen before include "She gives support in her column" , "Column carved as female figure" , "Pillar in female form" , "Column in female form" , "Sculptured female figure as support pillar" .)