These are the meanings of the letters ECSOTR when you unscramble them.
- Corset (n.)
An article of dress inclosing the chest and waist worn (chiefly by women) to support the body or to modify its shape; stays.
- Corset (n.)
In the Middle Ages, a gown or basque of which the body was close fitting, worn by both men and women.
- Corset (v. t.)
To inclose in corsets.
- Coster (n.)
One who hawks about fruit, green vegetables, fish, etc.
- Escort (n.)
A body of armed men to attend a person of distinction for the sake of affording safety when on a journey; one who conducts some one as an attendant; a guard, as of prisoners on a march; also, a body of persons, attending as a mark of respect or honor; -- applied to movements on land, as convoy is to movements at sea.
- Escort (n.)
Protection, care, or safeguard on a journey or excursion; as, to travel under the escort of a friend.
- Escort (n.)
To attend with a view to guard and protect; to accompany as safeguard; to give honorable or ceremonious attendance to; -- used esp. with reference to journeys or excursions on land; as, to escort a public functionary, or a lady; to escort a baggage wagon.
- rectos (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Scoter (n.)
Any one of several species of northern sea ducks of the genus Oidemia.
- Sector (n.)
A mathematical instrument, consisting of two rulers connected at one end by a joint, each arm marked with several scales, as of equal parts, chords, sines, tangents, etc., one scale of each kind on each arm, and all on lines radiating from the common center of motion. The sector is used for plotting, etc., to any scale.
- Sector (n.)
A part of a circle comprehended between two radii and the included arc.
- Sector (n.)
An astronomical instrument, the limb of which embraces a small portion only of a circle, used for measuring differences of declination too great for the compass of a micrometer. When it is used for measuring zenith distances of stars, it is called a zenith sector.