to be a stitch
91stitch up — Verb. To betray with false evidence. Also phrased to stitch someone up. Noun. An act of betrayal with the use of falsified evidence …
92ˌstitch sth ˈup — phrasal verb 1) to repair a piece of cloth that has been torn by sewing it 2) same as stitch …
93Stitch in time saves nine — A stitch in time saves nine means that if a job needs doing it is better to do it now, because it will only get worse, like a hole in clothes that requires stitching …
94stitch bonding — siūtinis sujungimas statusas T sritis radioelektronika atitikmenys: angl. stitch bonding; stitching vok. Anheften, n; Heften, n rus. присоединение сшиванием, n pranc. raccordement par point, m …
95stitch — see a stitch in time saves nine …
96stitch — [OE] Stitch was originally a noun, meaning ‘sting, prick’ (a sense which survives in the very specialized application to a ‘pain in the side, caused by exertion’). It came from a prehistoric Germanic *stikiz, which was formed from the base *stik… …
97stitch someone up — (Brit. informal) FALSELY INCRIMINATE, get someone into trouble; informal frame, set up; Brit. informal fit someone up, drop someone in it. → stitch …
98stitch aloft — transitive verb : to stitch (as a shoe or the sole of a shoe) so that the stitches are exposed and not in a covered channel …
99stitch in time — a timely action or remedy a stitch in time saves nine …
100Chain stitch — Stitch Stitch, n. [OE. stiche, AS. stice a pricking, akin to stician to prick. See {Stick}, v. i.] 1. A single pass of a needle in sewing; the loop or turn of the thread thus made. [1913 Webster] 2. A single turn of the thread round a needle in… …