crouk

answer Answers

ProphetesAI is thinking...

MindMap

Loading...

Sources

1
crouk
▪ I. † crouk, v. Obs. rare. Also 5 crowke. [Of uncertain origin; but perh. corresponding to Ger. dial. krauchen in same sense, which Hildebrand suggests to be:—*kr{uacu}kan = kreukan (Ger. kriechen), like OLG. kr{uacu}pan = kreupan, OE. créopan to creep. Cf. crouch v.] intr. To bow, to make obeisanc... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 3.0 0.0
2
crouch
▪ I. † crouch, n.1 Obs. Forms: 1 cr{uacu}c, 2–3 cruche, 4–5 crouche, crowch(e. [Early ME. cruche, app.:—OE. cr{uacu}c, ad. L. crux, crucis cross. OE. cr{uacu}c is known to occur once c 1000 in sense ‘sign of the cross’: its history presents some difficulties. The palatalization of the final ć (whenc... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 1.5 0.0
3
Pierre Van Cortlandt
Crouk's with fife and drum." They were dispersed by the minute-men and "parts of Colonel Thomas' regiment, and the troops of horse of Captain N. wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org 0.0 0.90000004 0.0
4
crook
▪ I. crook, n. and a. (krʊk) Forms: 3–4 croc, 3–6 croke, 4–5 Sc. and north. cruk, 4–6 crok, kroke, 5–6 cruke, 5–8 crooke, 6–9 Sc. cruik, 4– crook. [ME. crōk, crōc, app. a. ON. krókr (Sw. krok, Da. krog) crook, hook, barb, trident; unknown elsewhere in Teutonic, but app. belonging to the same ablaut ... Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai 0.0 0.6 0.0