| 1. | to go and bring back; return with; get: to go up a hill to fetch a pail of water. |
| 2. | to cause to come; bring: to fetch a doctor. |
| 3. | to sell for or bring (a price, financial return, etc.): The horse fetched $50 more than it cost. |
| 4. | Informal. to charm; captivate: Her beauty fetched the coldest hearts. |
| 5. | to take (a breath). |
| 6. | to utter (a sigh, groan, etc.). |
| 7. | to deal or deliver (a stroke, blow, etc.). |
| 8. | to perform or execute (a movement, step, leap, etc.). |
| 9. | Chiefly Nautical and British Dialect. to reach; arrive at: to fetch port. |
| 10. | Hunting. (of a dog) to retrieve (game). |
| 11. | to go and bring things. |
| 12. | Chiefly Nautical. to move or maneuver. |
| 13. | Hunting. to retrieve game (often used as a command to a dog). |
| 14. | to go by an indirect route; circle (often fol. by around or about): We fetched around through the outer suburbs. |
| 15. | the act of fetching. |
| 16. | the distance of fetching: a long fetch. |
| 17. | Oceanography.
|
| 18. | the reach or stretch of a thing. |
| 19. | a trick; dodge. |
| 20. | fetch about, Nautical. (of a sailing vessel) to come onto a new tack. |
| 21. | fetch up,
|
| 22. | fetch and carry, to perform menial tasks. |

| wraith (def. 1). |

Fetch
A Macintosh program by Jim Matthews
Latest version: 2.1.2.
Fetch is Copyright 1992, Trustees of Dartmouth College.
(ftp://ftp.Dartmouth.edu/pub/mac/Fetch_2.1.2.sit.hqx). (ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/computing/systems/mac/info-mac/comm/tcp).
(1994-11-30)
fetch
area of ocean or lake surface over which the wind blows in an essentially constant direction, thus generating waves. The term also is used as a synonym for fetch length, which is the horizontal distance over which wave-generating winds blow. In an enclosed body of water, fetch is also defined as the distance between the points of minimum and maximum water-surface elevation. This line generally coincides with the longest axis in the general wind direction. Fetch is an important factor in the development of wind waves, which increase in height with increasing fetch up to a maximum of 1,600 km (1,000 miles). Wave heights do not increase with increasing fetch beyond this distance
Learn more about fetch with a free trial on Britannica.com.