When you insert the needle into a stitch you can insert it front to back (knit-wise) or back to front (purl-wise).
When you insert the needle into a stitch you can insert it front to back (knit-wise) or back to front (purl-wise).
if you mean the crossword, the answer is colonial
There are two ways to slip a stitch, knit-wise and purl-wise. When in doubt, generally you should slip purl-wise. Insert the needle into the stitch to be slipped either as if to knit (knit-wise) or as if to purl (purl-wise). Then slide it off the left needle without pulling a new stitch through it. That's all there is to it. Here are some applications: For a tidy selvage edge, slip the first stitch of each row purl-wise. For a decrease that is the mirror image of a K2TOG, do an SSK (Slip, Slip, Knit). Slip one stitch knit-wise. Slip another stitch knit-wise. Slipping knit-wise gives the stitches a half twist. Now slip them both together back onto the left needle, passing them with the needles held tip to tip. Knit them together through the back loops.
knit
a knot in a rope is a point
I assume you mean stocking stictch? that is knit one row, purl the next, so that you have the wavy pattern on one Garter stitch is plain knitting every row.
I think you mean tbl (L instead of 1), which is to knit through the back loop. (Regular knit stitch is through the front loop).
Knit or body tissue
A multicellular organism.
In knitting, k2tog is an abbreviation for "Knit Two Stitches Together," or simply "Knit Two Together."
It means Knit Off.
how do you knit CR6F