different between crant vs corant

crant

English

Noun

crant (plural crants)

  1. (obsolete) garland or crown
    • 1602 : William Shakespeare, Hamlet, act V scene 1
      Yet here she is allowed her virgin crants

Anagrams

  • ctRNA

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corant

English

Noun

corant (plural corants)

  1. A coranto (kind of dance).
    • a. 1699, Sir William Temple, 1st Baronet, Heads designed for an essay on conversation
      It is harder, in that, to dance a courant well than a jig.

Anagrams

  • Cantor, Carnot, Carton, Catron, Contra, TRACON, cantor, carton, contra, contra-, craton, tracon

Old French

Etymology

Present participle of corre, possibly corresponding to Latin currens, currentem.

Verb

corant

  1. present participle of corre

Adjective

corant m (oblique and nominative feminine singular corant or corante)

  1. running; in the process of running

Descendants

  • English: current
  • French: courant

Old Occitan

Etymology

Present participle of core (to run). Gallo-Romance cognate with Old French corant.

Adjective

corant

  1. running; in the process of running

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