These are the meanings of the letters ECRTW OE when you unscramble them.
- Cower (v. i.)
To stoop by bending the knees; to crouch; to squat; hence, to quail; to sink through fear.
- Cower (v. t.)
To cherish with care.
- Erect (a.)
Bold; confident; free from depression; undismayed.
- Erect (a.)
Directed upward; raised; uplifted.
- Erect (a.)
Elevated, as the tips of wings, heads of serpents, etc.
- Erect (a.)
Standing upright, with reference to the earth's surface, or to the surface to which it is attached.
- Erect (a.)
Upright, or having a vertical position; not inverted; not leaning or bent; not prone; as, to stand erect.
- Erect (a.)
Watchful; alert.
- Erect (v. i.)
To rise upright.
- Erect (v. t.)
To animate; to encourage; to cheer.
- Erect (v. t.)
To lift up; to elevate; to exalt; to magnify.
- Erect (v. t.)
To raise and place in an upright or perpendicular position; to set upright; to raise; as, to erect a pole, a flagstaff, a monument, etc.
- Erect (v. t.)
To raise, as a building; to build; to construct; as, to erect a house or a fort; to set up; to put together the component parts of, as of a machine.
- Erect (v. t.)
To set up as an assertion or consequence from premises, or the like.
- Erect (v. t.)
To set up or establish; to found; to form; to institute.
- Recto (n.)
A writ of right.
- Recto (n.)
The right-hand page; -- opposed to verso.
- Rewet (n.)
A gunlock.
- Terce (n.)
See Tierce.
- Tower (n.)
A citadel; a fortress; hence, a defense.
- Tower (n.)
A headdress of a high or towerlike form, fashionable about the end of the seventeenth century and until 1715; also, any high headdress.
- Tower (n.)
A mass of building standing alone and insulated, usually higher than its diameter, but when of great size not always of that proportion.
- Tower (n.)
A projection from a line of wall, as a fortification, for purposes of defense, as a flanker, either or the same height as the curtain wall or higher.
- Tower (n.)
A structure appended to a larger edifice for a special purpose, as for a belfry, and then usually high in proportion to its width and to the height of the rest of the edifice; as, a church tower.
- Tower (n.)
High flight; elevation.
- Tower (v. i.)
To rise and overtop other objects; to be lofty or very high; hence, to soar.
- Tower (v. t.)
To soar into.
- Wrote ()
imp. & archaic p. p. of Write.
- Wrote (imp.)
of Write
- Wrote (v. i.)
To root with the snout. See 1st Root.