cranny
/ˈkɹæni/
cranny
English
Noun Top 37,489
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Definition
A small, narrow opening, fissure, crevice, or chink, as in a wall, or other substance.
Etymology
From Middle English crany, crani (“cranny”), apparently a diminutive of *cran (+ -y), from Old French cran, cren (“notch, fissure”), a derivative of crener (“to notch, split”), from Medieval Latin crenō (“split”, verb), from Vulgar Latin *crinō (“split, break”, verb), of obscure origin. Despite a spurious use in Pliny, connection to Latin crēna is doubtful. Instead, probably of Germanic or Celtic origin. Compare Old High German chrinna (“notch, groove, crevice”), Alemannic German Krinne (“small crack, channel, groove”), Low German karn (“notch, groove, crevice, cranny”), Old Irish ara-chrinin (“to perish, decay”).
Example Sentences
- "Down thro the Cranies of the living Walls / The Crystal Streams descend in murm'ring Falls"
- "[H]e peep'd into every Cranny; ſometimes he admir'd the Beauty of the Architecture, and the vaſt Solidity of the Maſon's VVork; at other Times he commended the Symmetry and Proportion of the Rooms."
- "What a pity they didn’t stop up the chinks and the crannies though, and thrust in a little lint here and there."
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