Noun
A variant of 1st Wick.
A street; a village; a castle; a dwelling; a place of work, or exercise of authority; -- now obsolete except in composition; as, bailiwick, Warwick, Greenwick.
A narrow port or passage in the rink or course, flanked by the stones of previous players.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThe colour of the skin is less important than the spirit wich moves it. Edmund Cooper
We are all civilized people, wich means that we are all savages at heart but observing a few amenities of civilized behaviour. Tennessee Williams
We demand that sex speak the truth [...] and we demand that it tell us our truth, or rather, the deeply buried truth of that truth about ourselves wich we think we possess in our immediate consciousness. Michel Foucault
It ain't by princerples nor men My preudunt course is steadied- I scent wich pays the best, an' then Go into it baldheaded. James Russell Lowell
Actually Louise, both 'lupin' and 'lupine' are correct wich might be why he didn't mention it as a mis-spelling. Source: Internet
However, if their view change the benefits are there especially when the Axx chips will outperform Intel’s i7: less expensive, faster, thinner and lighter Macs with more powerful CPUs every year, wich is far from what Intel can deliver these days. Source: Internet