Associations to the word «Ditch»
Noun
- Pavement
- Side
- Batterie
- Ramp
- Davey
- Cannon
- Destroyer
- Oxfordshire
- Rear
- Ventilation
- Airport
- Kennel
- Effort
- Bunker
- Edge
- Gate
- Andes
- Trough
- Hollow
- Carcass
- Castle
- Flank
- Jeep
- Weather
- Grass
- Clump
- Patrol
- Dung
- Fill
- Crumbling
- Manure
- Trickle
- Naval
- Width
- Corpse
- Crying
- Aquaculture
- Sod
- Scramble
- Navy
- Upside
- Remnant
- Curtain
- Dc
- Headwater
- Dam
- Artefact
- Boundary
- Car
- Assailant
- Scrub
- Stronghold
- Woodland
- Hectare
- Plantation
- Manhattan
- Julie
- Strait
- Hms
- Air
- Charlotte
- Bombing
- Mile
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
DITCH, verb. Alternative form of deech
DITCH, noun. Alternative form of deech
DITCH, noun. A trench; a long, shallow indentation, as for irrigation or drainage.
DITCH, verb. (transitive) To discard or abandon.
DITCH, verb. (intransitive) To deliberately crash-land an airplane on the sea.
DITCH, verb. (intransitive) To deliberately not attend classes; to play hookey.
DITCH, verb. (intransitive) To dig ditches.
DITCH, verb. (transitive) To dig ditches around.
DITCH, verb. (transitive) To throw into a ditch.
DITCH DAY, noun. A day on which a group of students, generally the senior class, leaves the campus and its responsibilities for a day.
DITCH DAY, noun. A tradition in which Caltech seniors leave the campus for the day and underclassmen (all considered frosh regardless of actual year) attempt to break into their stacks.
Dictionary definition
DITCH, noun. A long narrow excavation in the earth.
DITCH, noun. Any small natural waterway.
DITCH, verb. Forsake; "ditch a lover".
DITCH, verb. Throw away; "Chuck these old notes".
DITCH, verb. Sever all ties with, usually unceremoniously or irresponsibly; "The company dumped him after many years of service"; "She dumped her boyfriend when she fell in love with a rich man".
DITCH, verb. Make an emergency landing on water.
DITCH, verb. Crash or crash-land; "ditch a car"; "ditch a plane".
DITCH, verb. Cut a trench in, as for drainage; "ditch the land to drain it"; "trench the fields".
Wise words
Kind words can be short and easy to speak, but their echoes
are truly endless.