These are the meanings of the letters EGIPCIA when you unscramble them.
- Cage (n.)
A box or inclosure, wholly or partly of openwork, in wood or metal, used for confining birds or other animals.
- Cage (n.)
A place of confinement for malefactors
- Cage (n.)
A skeleton frame to limit the motion of a loose piece, as a ball valve.
- Cage (n.)
A wirework strainer, used in connection with pumps and pipes.
- Cage (n.)
An outer framework of timber, inclosing something within it; as, the cage of a staircase.
- Cage (n.)
The box, bucket, or inclosed platform of a lift or elevator; a cagelike structure moving in a shaft.
- Cage (n.)
The catcher's wire mask.
- Cage (n.)
The drum on which the rope is wound in a hoisting whim.
- Cage (v. i.)
To confine in, or as in, a cage; to shut up or confine.
- Cape (n.)
A piece or point of land, extending beyond the adjacent coast into the sea or a lake; a promontory; a headland.
- Cape (n.)
A sleeveless garment or part of a garment, hanging from the neck over the back, arms, and shoulders, but not reaching below the hips. See Cloak.
- Cape (v. i.)
To gape.
- Cape (v. i.)
To head or point; to keep a course; as, the ship capes southwest by south.
- Epic (a.)
Narrated in a grand style; pertaining to or designating a kind of narrative poem, usually called an heroic poem, in which real or fictitious events, usually the achievements of some hero, are narrated in an elevated style.
- Epic (n.)
An epic or heroic poem. See Epic, a.
- Gape (n.)
The act of gaping; a yawn.
- Gape (n.)
The width of the mouth when opened, as of birds, fishes, etc.
- Gape (v. i.)
Expressing a desire for food; as, young birds gape.
- Gape (v. i.)
Indicating sleepiness or indifference; to yawn.
- Gape (v. i.)
To long, wait eagerly, or cry aloud for something; -- with for, after, or at.
- Gape (v. i.)
To open the mouth wide
- Gape (v. i.)
To pen or part widely; to exhibit a gap, fissure, or hiatus.
- Pace (n.)
A broad step or platform; any part of a floor slightly raised above the rest, as around an altar, or at the upper end of a hall.
- Pace (n.)
A device in a loom, to maintain tension on the warp in pacing the web.
- Pace (n.)
A single movement from one foot to the other in walking; a step.
- Pace (n.)
A slow gait; a footpace.
- Pace (n.)
Any single movement, step, or procedure.
- Pace (n.)
Manner of stepping or moving; gait; walk; as, the walk, trot, canter, gallop, and amble are paces of the horse; a swaggering pace; a quick pace.
- Pace (n.)
Specifically, a kind of fast amble; a rack.
- Pace (n.)
The length of a step in walking or marching, reckoned from the heel of one foot to the heel of the other; -- used as a unit in measuring distances; as, he advanced fifty paces.
- Pace (v. i.)
To go; to walk; specifically, to move with regular or measured steps.
- Pace (v. i.)
To move quickly by lifting the legs on the same side together, as a horse; to amble with rapidity; to rack.
- Pace (v. i.)
To pass away; to die.
- Pace (v. i.)
To proceed; to pass on.
- Pace (v. t.)
To develop, guide, or control the pace or paces of; to teach the pace; to break in.
- Pace (v. t.)
To measure by steps or paces; as, to pace a piece of ground.
- Pace (v. t.)
To walk over with measured tread; to move slowly over or upon; as, the guard paces his round.
- Page (n.)
A boy child.
- Page (n.)
A contrivance, as a band, pin, snap, or the like, to hold the skirt of a woman's dress from the ground.
- Page (n.)
A serving boy; formerly, a youth attending a person of high degree, especially at courts, as a position of honor and education; now commonly, in England, a youth employed for doing errands, waiting on the door, and similar service in households; in the United States, a boy employed to wait upon the members of a legislative body.
- Page (n.)
A track along which pallets carrying newly molded bricks are conveyed to the hack.
- Page (n.)
Any one of several species of beautiful South American moths of the genus Urania.
- Page (n.)
Fig.: A record; a writing; as, the page of history.
- Page (n.)
One side of a leaf of a book or manuscript.
- Page (n.)
The type set up for printing a page.
- Page (v. t.)
To attend (one) as a page.
- Page (v. t.)
To mark or number the pages of, as a book or manuscript; to furnish with folios.
- peag (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Pica (n.)
A service-book. See Pie.
- Pica (n.)
A size of type next larger than small pica, and smaller than English.
- Pica (n.)
A vitiated appetite that craves what is unfit for food, as chalk, ashes, coal, etc.; chthonophagia.
- Pica (n.)
The genus that includes the magpies.
- Pice (n.)
A small copper coin of the East Indies, worth less than a cent.