crawl

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
10
Words With Friends
12
Letters
5
Pronunciation
/kɹɔːl/
See all 5 pronunciations
/kɹɔːl/ · /kɹaːl/ · /kɹɔl/ · /kɹɑl/ · /kɹoːl/

Definition of crawl

15 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

verb

  1. (intransitive)To creep; to move slowly on hands and knees, or by dragging the body along the ground.
    “Clutching my wounded side, I crawled back to the trench.”
    “A VVorm finds vvhat it ſearches after, only by Feeling, as it cravvls from one thing to another. VVhereas a Man, having Eyes, ſees it in a Moment, all before him.”
    “'Children crawled over each other like little grey worms in the gutters,' he said. 'The only red things about them were their buttocks and they were raw. Their faces looked as if snails had slimed on them and their mothers were like great sick beasts whose byres had never been cleared.[…]'”
See all 15 definitions

verb

  1. (intransitive)To creep; to move slowly on hands and knees, or by dragging the body along the ground.
    “Clutching my wounded side, I crawled back to the trench.”
    “A VVorm finds vvhat it ſearches after, only by Feeling, as it cravvls from one thing to another. VVhereas a Man, having Eyes, ſees it in a Moment, all before him.”
    “'Children crawled over each other like little grey worms in the gutters,' he said. 'The only red things about them were their buttocks and they were raw. Their faces looked as if snails had slimed on them and their mothers were like great sick beasts whose byres had never been cleared.[…]'”
  2. (intransitive)To move forward slowly, with frequent stops.
    “The rush-hour traffic crawled around the bypass.”
  3. (intransitive)To act in a servile manner.
    “Don’t come crawling to me with your useless apologies!”
    “Our hard-ruled king. Again, there is sprung up. An heretic, an arch one, Cranmer; one. Hath crawled into the favour of the king”
  4. (intransitive)Followed by with: see crawl with.
  5. (intransitive)To feel a swarming sensation.
    “The horrible sight made my skin crawl.”
  6. (intransitive, transitive)To swim using the crawl stroke.
    “I think I’ll crawl the next hundred metres.”
  7. (transitive)To move over (an area) on hands and knees.
    “The baby crawled the entire second floor.”
  8. (transitive)To move over (an area) slowly, with frequent stops.
    “They crawled the downtown bars.”
    “"I used to crawl the Dungeon like you do, Bell, saving up money... But one day, I screwed verything up. Got thoroughly wrecked by a monster, and it ate my right arm."”
    “Eric had crawled the downtown bar scene with these guys many nights, after gigs and back when they were all in college together. Eric liked hanging with them, because they were as comfortable hanging anywhere—sports bars; gay clubs; […]”
    “One of the later Crawl trailers, the Nintendo Switch version, advertises its key gameplay in a sentence, “Crawl the dungeon while your friends possess the traps, beasts, and bosses against you” before later adopting the phrase […]”
  9. (Internet, transitive)To visit files or web sites in order to index them for searching.
    “Yahoo Search has updated its Slurp Crawler to crawl websites faster and more efficiently.”

noun

  1. The act of moving slowly on hands and knees, etc.
  2. The act of sequentially visiting a series of similar establishments (i.e., a bar crawl).
  3. A rapid swimming stroke with alternate overarm strokes and a fluttering kick.
  4. (figuratively)A very slow pace.
    “My computer has slowed down to a crawl since I installed that software package.”
  5. A piece of horizontally or vertically scrolling text overlaid on the main image.
    “22 March 2012, Scott Tobias, AV Club The Hunger Gameshttp://www.avclub.com/articles/the-hunger-games,71293/ The opening crawl (and a stirring propaganda movie) informs us that “The Hunger Games” are an annual event in Panem, a North American nation divided into 12 different districts, each in service to the Capitol, a wealthy metropolis that owes its creature comforts to an oppressive dictatorship.”
  6. A pen or enclosure of stakes and hurdles for holding fish.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English crawlen, crewlen, creulen, crallen, *cravelen, from Old Norse krafla (compare Danish kravle (“to crawl, creep”), Swedish kravla, kräla (“to creep, crawl”)), from Proto-Germanic *krablōną (compare Saterland Frisian…

See full etymology

From Middle English crawlen, crewlen, creulen, crallen, *cravelen, from Old Norse krafla (compare Danish kravle (“to crawl, creep”), Swedish kravla, kräla (“to creep, crawl”)), from Proto-Germanic *krablōną (compare Saterland Frisian krabbelje, Dutch krabbelen, German Low German krabbeln, German krabbeln), frequentative of *krabbōną (“to scratch, scrape”). Compare also Saterland Frisian krauelje (“to crawl, scuttle”), West Frisian kreauwelje (“to crawl”), Dutch krevelen, krieuwelen (“to crawl”), German Low German kribbeln, German kribbeln (“to creep, crawl, tingle”). See also crab, crabble.

Hooks

3 extensions · 1 front · 2 back

A single letter you can add to crawl to make another valid word.

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