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
A word is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged; it is
the skin of a living thought and may vary greatly in color
and content according to the circumstances and time in which
it is used.