quitch
English
    
    Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /kwɪt͡ʃ/
- Audio (Southern England) - (file) 
- Rhymes: -ɪtʃ
Etymology 1
    
From Middle English quicchen, quytchen, quecchen, from Old English cweċċan (“to shake, swing, move, vibrate, shake off, give up”), from Proto-West Germanic *kwakkjan, from Proto-Germanic *kwakjaną (“to shake, swing”), from Proto-Indo-European *gʷog- (“to shake, swing”). Related to Old English cwacian (“to quake”). More at quake.
Verb
    
quitch (third-person singular simple present quitches, present participle quitching, simple past and past participle quitched)
- (transitive, obsolete) To shake (something); to stir, move. [8th–13th c.]
- (intransitive, now UK, regional) To stir; to move. [from 13th c.]
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, “Book V, Canto IX”, in The Faerie Queene. […], London: […] [John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, →OCLC:- With a strong yron chaine and coller bound, / That once he could not move, nor quich at all […].
 
 
- (intransitive) To flinch; shrink.
Etymology 2
    
From Middle English quich, a palatised variant of quike, quyke, from Old English cwice, from Proto-West Germanic *kwikwā, from Proto-Germanic *kwikwǭ. Cognate with Dutch kweek, German Low German Queek, German Quecke.
Alternative forms
    
- quich (obsolete)
Noun
    
quitch (uncountable)
- Elymus repens, couch grass (a species of grass, often considered a weed)
- Synonyms: couch grass, quackgrass
 - 1658, Sir Thomas Browne, Urne-Burial, Penguin, published 2005, page 21:- we found the bones and ashes half mortered unto the sand and sides of the Urne; and some long roots of Quich, or Dogs-grass wreathed about the bones.
 
 
Derived terms
    
- (plant): couch, couch-grass
Translations
    
couch grass — see couch grass
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