These are the meanings of the letters ITCIPSH when you unscramble them.
- Chips (n.)
A ship's carpenter.
- chits (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Pitch (n.)
A descent; a fall; a thrusting down.
- Pitch (n.)
A point or peak; the extreme point or degree of elevation or depression; hence, a limit or bound.
- Pitch (n.)
A thick, black, lustrous, and sticky substance obtained by boiling down tar. It is used in calking the seams of ships; also in coating rope, canvas, wood, ironwork, etc., to preserve them.
- Pitch (n.)
A throw; a toss; a cast, as of something from the hand; as, a good pitch in quoits.
- Pitch (n.)
Fig.: To darken; to blacken; to obscure.
- Pitch (n.)
Height; stature.
- Pitch (n.)
See Pitchstone.
- Pitch (n.)
That point of the ground on which the ball pitches or lights when bowled.
- Pitch (n.)
The distance between the centers of holes, as of rivet holes in boiler plates.
- Pitch (n.)
The distance from center to center of any two adjacent teeth of gearing, measured on the pitch line; -- called also circular pitch.
- Pitch (n.)
The length, measured along the axis, of a complete turn of the thread of a screw, or of the helical lines of the blades of a screw propeller.
- Pitch (n.)
The limit of ground set to a miner who receives a share of the ore taken out.
- Pitch (n.)
The point where a declivity begins; hence, the declivity itself; a descending slope; the degree or rate of descent or slope; slant; as, a steep pitch in the road; the pitch of a roof.
- Pitch (n.)
The relative acuteness or gravity of a tone, determined by the number of vibrations which produce it; the place of any tone upon a scale of high and low.
- Pitch (n.)
To cover over or smear with pitch.
- Pitch (v. i.)
To fix one's choise; -- with on or upon.
- Pitch (v. i.)
To fix or place a tent or temporary habitation; to encamp.
- Pitch (v. i.)
To light; to settle; to come to rest from flight.
- Pitch (v. i.)
To plunge or fall; esp., to fall forward; to decline or slope; as, to pitch from a precipice; the vessel pitches in a heavy sea; the field pitches toward the east.
- Pitch (v. t.)
To fix or set the tone of; as, to pitch a tune.
- Pitch (v. t.)
To set or fix, as a price or value.
- Pitch (v. t.)
To set, face, or pave with rubble or undressed stones, as an embankment or a roadway.
- Pitch (v. t.)
To throw, generally with a definite aim or purpose; to cast; to hurl; to toss; as, to pitch quoits; to pitch hay; to pitch a ball.
- Pitch (v. t.)
To thrust or plant in the ground, as stakes or poles; hence, to fix firmly, as by means of poles; to establish; to arrange; as, to pitch a tent; to pitch a camp.
- piths (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Stich (n.)
A line in the Scriptures; specifically (Hebrew Scriptures), one of the rhythmic lines in the poetical books and passages of the Old Treatment, as written in the oldest Hebrew manuscripts and in the Revised Version of the English Bible.
- Stich (n.)
A row, line, or rank of trees.
- Stich (n.)
A verse, of whatever measure or number of feet.
- tipis (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.