Home › Words › S › stichstich/stɪk/stich means A surname from German.Among words judged in Lexicurio's Arena, stich ranks #2,613 of 42,762 for Qualifying.stich is pronounced /stɪk/.EtymologyBorrowed from German Stich.nameA surname from German.e.g.“In the 1991 Wimbledon semifinal between Michael Stich and Stefan Edberg, there was just one service break in the entire match, and the guy whose serve was broken, Stich, ended up winning the match!” — 2008, Pete Sampras, Peter Bodo, Pete Sampras: A Champion's Mind, published 2010, unnumbered page:nounA verse, of whatever measure or number of feet, especially a verse of Scripture.A part of a line of poetry, especially in the distichal poetry of the Hebrew Bible and in early Germanic heroic verse such as Beowulf, where the line is composed of two (occasionally three) such parts.A row, line, or rank of trees.Definitions & examples from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).Words closest in meaningBy meaning, not spelling — each word's AI semantic fingerprint, nearest first.stichos 75% match — A line of ordinary length in a manuscript. vs stich →stichometry 66% match — The measurement of books in terms of how many lines of text they contain. vs stich →stichometrical 66% match — Of or pertaining to stichometry; characterized by stichs, or lines. vs stich →sticheron 66% match — A hymn, often written in cycles and sung in alternation with psalm verses, used in the Orthodox Church and those Eastern Catholic Churches which follow the Byzantine Rite. vs stich →strophe 65% match — A turn in verse, as from one metrical foot to another, or from one side of a chorus to the other. vs stich →chronostich 63% match — A chronogram having the form of a stich. vs stich →stanza 62% match — A unit of a poem, written or printed as a paragraph; equivalent to a verse. vs stich →stichometrically 62% match — In a stichometrical manner. vs stich →