These are the meanings of the letters FING when you unscramble them.
- Fig (n.)
A small fruit tree (Ficus Carica) with large leaves, known from the remotest antiquity. It was probably native from Syria westward to the Canary Islands.
- Fig (n.)
A small piece of tobacco.
- Fig (n.)
Figure; dress; array.
- Fig (n.)
The fruit of a fig tree, which is of round or oblong shape, and of various colors.
- Fig (n.)
The value of a fig, practically nothing; a fico; -- used in scorn or contempt.
- Fig (n.)
To insult with a fico, or contemptuous motion. See Fico.
- Fig (n.)
To put into the head of, as something useless o/ contemptible.
- Fin (n.)
A blade of whalebone.
- Fin (n.)
A feather; a spline.
- Fin (n.)
A finlike appendage, as to submarine boats.
- Fin (n.)
A finlike organ or attachment; a part of an object or product which protrudes like a fin
- Fin (n.)
A mark or ridge left on a casting at the junction of the parts of a mold.
- Fin (n.)
A membranous, finlike, swimming organ, as in pteropod and heteropod mollusks.
- Fin (n.)
An organ of a fish, consisting of a membrane supported by rays, or little bony or cartilaginous ossicles, and serving to balance and propel it in the water.
- Fin (n.)
End; conclusion; object.
- Fin (n.)
The hand.
- Fin (n.)
The thin sheet of metal squeezed out between the collars of the rolls in the process of rolling.
- Fin (v. t.)
To carve or cut up, as a chub.
- Gin (conj.)
If.
- Gin (n.)
A hoisting drum, usually vertical; a whim.
- Gin (n.)
A machine for raising or moving heavy weights, consisting of a tripod formed of poles united at the top, with a windlass, pulleys, ropes, etc.
- Gin (n.)
A machine for separating the seeds from cotton; a cotton gin.
- Gin (n.)
A strong alcoholic liquor, distilled from rye and barley, and flavored with juniper berries; -- also called Hollands and Holland gin, because originally, and still very extensively, manufactured in Holland. Common gin is usually flavored with turpentine.
- Gin (n.)
Against; near by; towards; as, gin night.
- Gin (n.)
Contrivance; artifice; a trap; a snare.
- Gin (v. i.)
To begin; -- often followed by an infinitive without to; as, gan tell. See Gan.
- Gin (v. t.)
To catch in a trap.
- Gin (v. t.)
To clear of seeds by a machine; as, to gin cotton.