Associations to the word «Dit»
Noun
- Qu
- Elle
- Tout
- Lieu
- Je
- Que
- Nous
- Ce
- Roi
- Une
- Livre
- Baptiste
- Tyrosine
- Alphonse
- Nom
- Et
- Ai
- Ne
- Petit
- Le
- Guillaume
- Mort
- Morse
- Aux
- Sans
- Jour
- Trois
- Au
- Amour
- Augustin
- Iodine
- Les
- Antoine
- Dat
- Homme
- Philippe
- François
- Jacques
- Mon
- Des
- Pa
- Monde
- Blanchard
- Marguerite
- Appellation
- Alsace
- Tu
- Belle
- Un
- Lettre
- Bruin
- Femme
- Wat
- En
- Ska
- Alexandre
- Vineyard
- Pierre
- Temp
- Bon
- Dublin
- Caves
- Meath
- Conservatory
- Marie
- Conte
- Jean
- Michel
- Cree
- Tit
- Carla
- Neutral
- Sur
- Pun
- Cher
- Pendulum
- Fontaine
- Pointe
- Alexis
- Liv
- Nicolas
- Te
- Det
- Par
- Dominique
- Se
- Ban
- Dan
- Charlemagne
- Christine
- Sou
Verb
Wiktionary
DIT, verb. (UK dialectal) (Northern England) To stop up; block (an opening); close. Cf. Scots dit.
DIT, verb. (obsolete) To close up.
DIT, noun. (archaic) (rare) A ditty, a little melody.
DIT, noun. (obsolete) A word; a decree.
DIT, noun. The spoken representation of a dot in radio and telegraph Morse code.
DIT, noun. (information theory) decimal digit
Dictionary definition
DIT, noun. The shorter of the two telegraphic signals used in Morse code.
Wise words
Language is a process of free creation; its laws and
principles are fixed, but the manner in which the principles
of generation are used is free and infinitely varied. Even
the interpretation and use of words involves a process of
free creation.