piece, area, spot, scrap, strip, shred
cabbage
Patch
In Irish, paiste (pash-ti) means 'patch'; páiste (paush-ti) means 'child'.
Patch as a verb.I will patch your jeans later today.
The word 'patch' is a noun (patch, patches) and a verb (patch, patches, patching, patched).Examples:The patch on your jeans adds character. (noun)They need to patch that crack in the sidewalk. (verb)
There was a hole in his trousers, but he got a patch and repaired it.
The word patch is singular, not plural. The plural form is patches.
He decided to patch the trousers rather than throw them out.
Nunatak is from an inuit word nunataq and means a rocky/earthen area of a mountain or hillside that is not snow or ice covered. Basically, a bare patch on a hillside.
Patch birth control means using a small patch that sticks to one's skin in order to prevent one from becoming pregnant. It is similar in size to a nicotine patch.
"Patchable" means that a patch, or fix, can be applied.
It means: "a lot".You can say: "I've seen enough sailors to patch hell a mile".