fetch-the vb.-stem in comb. with adv., as fetch-after, see quot. 1888; with n. as obj.; † fetch-fireattrib.; fetch-water, a water-carrier.1598Chapman Iliad vi. 495 But spin the Greek wives' webs of task, and their fetch-water be.1784Unfortunate Sensibility II. 10 In a country-town a much less change would have been a sufficient topic for a fetch-fire gossip, or a bake-house conversation.1888Lancet 30 June 1308 The forms of caterpillar known..popularly..as ‘fetch-afters’, from their mode of progression.