ditch
31ditch — v To leave someone who is with you. I ll ditch my younger brother with my grandmother. 1940s …
32Ditch — Finish, stop doing, leave. This sucks, let s ditch …
33Ditch — Finish, stop doing, leave. This sucks, let s ditch …
34ditch — See: last ditch …
35ditch — vb British to play truant, bunk off. The term has been used (intransitively) by schoolchil dren since at least 2000. It may be a transferral of the older colloquial sense of ditch meaning to abandon or dispose of. Mitch is a contemporary synonym …
36ditch — to land an aircraft in water Not of seaplanes. A ditch is a drain dug to receive water, whence the standard English meaning, to discard in such a drain, or elsewhere, any unwanted object. Originally a Second World War punning use but now of …
37ditch — noun a narrow channel dug to hold or carry water. verb 1》 provide with or dig a ditch. 2》 informal get rid of; give up. ↘N. Amer. play truant from (school). 3》 (with reference to an aircraft) make or cause to make a forced landing on water.… …
38ditch — 1 noun (C) a long narrow hole cut into the ground at the side of a field, road etc, especially for water to flow through see also: lastditch 2 verb 1 (T) to get rid of something because you no longer need it 2 (T) informal to end a romantic… …
39ditch — [dɪtʃ] noun [C] I a long narrow hole that is dug along the side of a road or field II verb [T] informal ditch [dɪtʃ] to get rid of someone or something because you no longer like or need them …
40ditch — Auwaha, hā, āwa a. ♦ Water ditch, auwai, auwai pa a, holowai …