sitch

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English[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

From Middle English sich, siche, from Old English sīċ (a watercourse; sike), from Proto-West Germanic *sīk, from Proto-Germanic *sīką (slow flowing water; a trickle).

Alternative forms[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (file)

Noun[edit]

sitch (plural sitches)

  1. (now chiefly dialectal) A brook; ditch; gutter; drain; ravine.
Related terms[edit]

Etymology 2[edit]

Shortening of situation, with phonetic respelling.

Noun[edit]

sitch (plural sitches)

  1. (slang) Situation.
    • 2005, Lois H. Gresh, Robert E. Weinberg, The science of supervillains, John Wiley and Sons, page 1:
      So here's the sitch: Bruce Banner and Betty Ross Talbot are falling from roughly eight miles high.
    • 2007, George Bennett Fain, Pandora's Box, Lulu.com, page 159:
      Valeska had insisted 'she' stay, sleep where it was definitely safe. Just 'til the sitch could be settled.
    • 2008, Editors of TEEN magazine, Teen Uncover the Real You: A Quiz Book, Sterling Publishing Company, Inc., page 2:
      Maybe one is more introspective and the other is more outgoing. Whatever the sitch, you two balance each other out.
    • 2011 Allen Gregory, "Pilot" (season 1, episode 1):
      Allen Gregory DeLongpre: Great, I'll see you back in there. Also, I wouldn't lose my mind if you decided to chew a stick of gum. Thanks for understanding the sitch, Gina, you're a china doll.

Etymology 3[edit]

Determiner[edit]

sitch

  1. Pronunciation spelling of such.
    • 1864, Henry Mayhew, London Labour and the London Poor:
      They stops you on the sly in the streets, and tells you to call at their house at sitch a hour of the day, and when you goes there they smuggles you quietly into some room by yourselves, and then sets to work Jewing away as hard as they can, prizing up their own things, and downcrying yourn.

Anagrams[edit]