crook

/kɹʊk/

crook

English Noun Top 7,283
American (Lessac) (medium)
Female 0.4s
American (Amy) (medium)
Female 0.7s
American (Ryan) (medium)
Male 0.3s
Ad

Definition

A bend; turn; curve; curvature; a flexure.

Etymology

From Middle English croke, crok, from Old English *crōc (“hook, bend, crook”), from Proto-West Germanic *krōk, from Proto-Germanic *krōkaz (“bend, hook”), from Proto-Indo-European *greg- (“tracery, basket, bend”). Cognate with Dutch kreuk (“a bend, fold, wrinkle”), Middle Low German kroke, krake (“fold, wrinkle”), Danish krog (“crook, hook”), Swedish krok (“crook, hook”), Icelandic krókur (“hook”). Compare typologically Czech křivák (< křivý < Proto-Slavic *krivъ, whence also *krivьda).

Example Sentences

  • "She held the baby in the crook of her arm."
  • "he walks bye lanes, and crooks"
  • "the crook of a cane"
Ad