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English

letch

/lɛt͡ʃ/ · noun

Meaning

  1. Strong desire; passion.
  2. A lecher.
  3. A stream or pool in boggy land.
  4. A quantity of wood ashes, through which water passes, and thus imbibes the alkali.
  5. A tub or vat for leaching ashes, bark, etc.
  6. A jelly-like sweetmeat popular in the fifteenth century.
  7. To purge a soluble matter out of something by the action of a percolating fluid.
  8. To part with soluble constituents by percolation.
  9. An aquatic blood-sucking annelid of class Hirudinea, especially Hirudo medicinalis.
  10. A person who derives profit from others in a parasitic fashion.
  11. A glass tube designed for drawing blood from damaged tissue by means of a vacuum.
  12. A physician.
  13. (Heathenry) A healer.
  14. The vertical edge of a square sail.
  15. The aft edge of a triangular sail.

Etymology / origin

No prose etymology has been added yet.

No ancestor words have been linked yet.

Related words

Descendant words

No descendant words have been linked yet.

Sources

  1. DictionaryAPI.dev English dictionary data
letch — meaning and etymology | WikiWord