These are the meanings of the letters DOWT when you unscramble them.
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Dot (n.)
A marriage portion; dowry.
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Dot (n.)
A small point or spot, made with a pen or other pointed instrument; a speck, or small mark.
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Dot (n.)
Anything small and like a speck comparatively; a small portion or specimen; as, a dot of a child.
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Dot (v. i.)
To make dots or specks.
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Dot (v. t.)
To mark or diversify with small detached objects; as, a landscape dotted with cottages.
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Dot (v. t.)
To mark with dots or small spots; as, to dot a line.
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Dow (n.)
A kind of vessel. See Dhow.
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Dow (v. t.)
To furnish with a dower; to endow.
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Tod (n.)
A bush; a thick shrub; a bushy clump.
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Tod (n.)
A fox; -- probably so named from its bushy tail.
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Tod (n.)
An old weight used in weighing wool, being usually twenty-eight pounds.
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Tod (v. t. & i.)
To weigh; to yield in tods.
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Tow (n.)
The coarse and broken part of flax or hemp, separated from the finer part by the hatchel or swingle.
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Tow (v. t.)
A rope by which anything is towed; a towline, or towrope.
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Tow (v. t.)
That which is towed, or drawn by a towline, as a barge, raft, collection of boats, ect.
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Tow (v. t.)
The act of towing, or the state of being towed; --chiefly used in the phrase, to take in tow, that is to tow.
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Tow (v. t.)
To draw or pull through the water, as a vessel of any kind, by means of a rope.
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Two (n.)
A symbol representing two units, as 2, II., or ii.
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Two (n.)
One and one; twice one.
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Two (n.)
The sum of one and one; the number next greater than one, and next less than three; two units or objects.
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Wot ()
1st & 3d pers. sing. pres. of Wit, to know. See the Note under Wit, v.
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Wot (imp.)
of Weet
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Wot (pres. sing.)
of Wit