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crampet
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Crumpet - Wikipedia
A crumpet is a small griddle bread made from an unsweetened batter of water or milk, flour, and yeast, popular in the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, ...
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Crampet - Mistholme
A crampet is the metal ferrule at the tip of a scabbard; it may also be blazoned as a “chape”, “bouterol”, or “boteroll”.
mistholme.com
mistholme.com
CRAMPET definition in American English - Collins Dictionary
crampet in British English · 1. a cramp iron · 2. the chape of a scabbard · 3. obsolete. a type of crampon formerly used by curlers. Collins English Dictionary ...
www.collinsdictionary.com
www.collinsdictionary.com
crampet
crampet (ˈkræmpɪt) Also 5–9 crampette, (8 cramp-bit, 9 crampit). [app. a deriv. of cramp n.2] 1. The chape of the scabbard of a sword; occasionally used in Heraldry as a charge.1489 Wardr. Acc. in Fairholt (1885) II. 136, ij crampettes for the king's sword. 1515 Will of R. West (Somerset Ho.), My be...
Oxford English Dictionary
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CRAMPETTE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of CRAMPETTE is the chape of a sword scabbard; specifically : a conventionalized representation of such a chape used as a charge in heraldry.
www.merriam-webster.com
www.merriam-webster.com
Crumpet recipe - RecipeTin Eats
How to make crumpets · Mix water, flour and salt to form a sticky but stirrable batter. · Leave in a warm place for 30 minutes until the surface ...
www.recipetineats.com
www.recipetineats.com
Château de Roquetaillade
The château park includes remains of the medieval curtain wall with the barbican, the Pesquey stream and its banks, the 19th century chalet, and the Crampet
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
crampet, n. meanings, etymology and more - Oxford English Dictionary
The earliest known use of the noun crampet is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for crampet is from 1489, in ...
www.oed.com
www.oed.com
crampet - Middle English Compendium - University of Michigan
Forms, crampet n. Also carmpot. Etymology, Dim. of crampe. Definitions (Senses and Subsenses). 1. A small cramping iron. Show 1 Quotation Hide 1 Quotation ...
quod.lib.umich.edu
quod.lib.umich.edu
crampets - in - Electrical Tools and Products - Electricians Forums
Probably the oldest form of pipe fixing. Very common on lead pipe. Big hammer, and smack them in, then stand back and wish you'd used ...
www.electriciansforums.net
www.electriciansforums.net
SND :: crampet - Dictionaries of the Scots Language
CRAMPET, CRAMPIT, CRAMP-BIT, n. Cf. Cramp, n.2 [′krɑmpɪt]. †1. “The guard of the handle of a sword” (Sc. 1808 Jam.; w.Sc. 1741 A. M'Donald Galick Vocab.
dsl.ac.uk
dsl.ac.uk
crampon
▪ I. crampon, n. (ˈkræmpən) Also crampoon (kræmˈpuːn). [a. F. crampon, late L. type crampōn-em, deriv. of radical form *cramp, f. LG.: cf. cramp n.1, n.2.] 1. A bar of iron or other metal bent in the form of a hook, to serve as a grapple or clutch; a grappling-iron; also = cramp n.2 2.1490 Caxton En...
Oxford English Dictionary
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cramp
▪ I. cramp, n.1 (kræmp) Forms: 4–7 crampe, (4–5 crompe, craumpe, 5 cramppe, croampe), 5– cramp. [ME. cra(u)mpe, a. OF. crampe (13th c. in Littré), a. OLG. *krambe: cf. MLG. and MDu. krampe, LG. krampe, Du. kramp f., beside OS. cramp, OHG. chrampf, G. krampf m., according to Kluge, a subst. use of cr...
Oxford English Dictionary
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