| BYCATCHES | • bycatches n. Plural of bycatch. • by-catches n. Plural of by-catch. • BYCATCH n. an immature fish, esp. one caught along with the main catch. |
| CATCHABLE | • catchable adj. That can be caught. • CATCHABLE adj. capable of being caught. |
| CATCHALLS | • catchalls n. Plural of catchall. • catch-alls n. Plural of catch-all. • CATCHALL n. something dealing with a number of instances. |
| CATCHIEST | • catchiest adj. Superlative form of catchy: most catchy. • CATCHY adj. pleasing and easily remembered. |
| CATCHINGS | • catchings n. Plural of catching. • CATCHING n. the act of catching. |
| CATCHLINE | • catchline n. A short line of text designed to catch the eye, especially one used as an advertising slogan. • catchline n. (Printing) A temporary note at the top of a page or galley proof to identify it. • CATCHLINE n. a slogan, esp. in advertising or politics. |
| CATCHMENT | • catchment n. (Often attributive) Any structure or land feature which catches and holds water; the collection of such water. • catchment n. A catchment area, or the people it serves. • catchment v. To divide into catchment areas. |
| CATCHPOLE | • catchpole n. (Obsolete) A taxman, one who gathers taxes. • catchpole n. A sheriff’s officer, usually one who arrests debtors. • catchpole n. (Historical) An implement formerly used for seizing and securing a man who would otherwise be out of reach. |
| CATCHPOLL | • catchpoll n. Alternative form of catchpole. • CATCHPOLL n. (historical) a sheriff's officer who made arrests for failure to pay a debt, also CATCHPOLE. |
| CATCHWEED | • catchweed n. A plant, cleavers. • CATCHWEED n. goosegrass or cleavers. |
| CATCHWORD | • catchword n. (Printing, historical) A word under the right-hand side of the last line on a book page that repeats… • catchword n. (Theater) The last word of a speech, serving as a cue for the next speaker. • catchword n. A word or expression repeated until it becomes representative of a party, school, business, or point of view. |
| OVERCATCH | • overcatch v. (Transitive, UK dialectal) To overtake. • overcatch v. To catch too many; to overfish. • OVERCATCH v. to overtake. |
| RECATCHES | • recatches v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of recatch. • RECATCH v. to catch again. |
| UPCATCHES | • UPCATCH v. to catch up. |